<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, the correct response would be that the </span>transition from the First to the Second Industrial Revolution in the United States came about with a shift towards large-scale factory production as opposed to smaller scale industrial projects.
During that period local rulers, either powerful families or military<span> warlords, dominated the land, while the emperor was merely a figurehead and not a significant political presence. Society was divided into two main classes in Feudal Japan, the nobility and the peasants.</span>
Absolutely! Especially for example during the Vietnam war you had navy aircraft carriers off the coast providing troops and material that instead of being dropped by large aircraft could simply be carried by helicopters, notably the Chinook and Huey were the most vital
The government implemented rations on certain goods, limiting what and how much consumers could buy. The government also regulated prices and wages. The war helped stimulate the American economy by creating millions of jobs. The high unemployment rates remaining from the great depression were significantly lowered