A primary factor fueling the long economic boom from World War II to the 1970s was
a. low energy costs.
b. reduced military expenditures.
c. low inflation.
d. sound government economic planning.
e. cooperation between business and labor.
a
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How were religion and foreign policy related in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in the United States?
a. Most U.S. foreign ministers were religious leaders, using their diplomatic posts for missionary access. b. Most religious leaders believed that God had blessed the United States with riches that should be shared with the world's poor, making foreign policy mainly about charity. c. Most religious leaders believed that God had given the United States to Christians, and they should be content and not seek more riches throughout the world. d. Most religious leaders believed that Americans should bring Christianity to the rest of the world, so they advocated imperialist foreign policies. e. Most religious leaders followed the "conversion by sword" example of European Christian powers in the Middle Ages, so they advocated U.S. military coups.
________ believed the European economies should be restructured to make imperialism unnecessary
A. J. A. Hobson B. Karl Marx C. Lenin D. Benjamin Disraeli
The Congress of Vienna ended the ________
A) Napoleonic Wars B) French Revolution C) American Revolution D) 1848 uprisings
The end of the Songhai empire was the result of
a. the invasion and conquest by Morocco. b. Portuguese interference in Songhai trade in the Indian Ocean. c. defeat by the armies of the Ottoman empire. d. a takeover by Omani Arabs. e. internal political turbulence.