Keep in mind the following. Regarding the Zimmermann Telegram, Mexico completely ignored the note and didn't take it seriously. Given that, was a declaration of war by the US upon Germany justified? Regarding the Lusitania, it was tragic, but it also cannot be denied that Germany had declared a general war zone and the use of unrestricted submarine warfare surrounding the British Isles, and US ships willfully ignored that warning.
Even if the entry of WW1 was unjustified, did it still have economic or political benefits? Keep in mind, the US had already established itself as a world power in the Spanish-American War, the sun was about to set on the British Empire regardless of the US' entry into WW1, and the prosperity of the 1920s in the US may have no link to the outcome of the War.
<span>So, what do you think? Was the death of over 100,000 Americans worth it?
i fount them for you i hope i helped</span>
Shirley Jackson told: "the idea for "The Lottery" had come to me while I was pushing my daughter up the hill in her stroller—it was, as I say, a warm morning, and the hill was steep, and besides my daughter, the stroller held the day’s groceries—and perhaps the effort of that last 50 yards up the hill put an edge to the story.”
Explanation:
"The Lottery" is a short story written by Shirley Jackson in which members of a small community join together every year to follow a tradition according to which, randomly, the destiny of one of them is decided. The raffler winner is stoned to the dead to ensure prosperity for the whole village. The title is a clear instance of irony.
Answer:
Yet it is certain that the power to produce this delight does not reside in nature, but in man, or in a harmony of both
Explanation:
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<em><u> Brainlists please</u></em></h2>
Realism. for it is showing what you believe in your heart.