During the war, which Wilson claimed would make the world safe for democracy, states
a. regulated production as never before.
b. manipulated the masses psychologically to continue the war effort.
c. exercised ever greater control of people's lives.
d. demonstrated how a nation's human and material resources could be organized for a single objective.
e. all of the above
e
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In 1823, British Foreign Minister George Canning proposed that the United States and Great Britain issue a joint declaration announcing that
A) neither nation would continue to pay tribute to the Barbary states. B) both nations would oppose any further European intervention in the Americas. C) the entire Pacific coast from Alaska to the Oregon region was closed to foreign shipping. D) the two nations would jointly occupy the Oregon region.
Nationalist movements were especially challenging because established European states tended to be __________.
A. multiethnic hereditary states B. liberal republics C. undemocratic D. tied to a religious tradition
When William Henry Harrison's army defeated Indians at Prophetstown in what is known as the Battle of Tippecanoe, the result was that:
a. Harrison was reelected governor and soon made peace with the defeated Indians b. the Indians' capital was destroyed, but the movement to unite Indians gained strength and many Indians remained hostile c. Tecumseh lost face among the Shawnee Indians, and "the Prophet" was no longer seen as having mystical powers d. the British saw an opportunity to expand their influence
In the 1920s, many rural Americans thought of the new city-oriented culture as
A) encouraging people to turn to Christianity. B) blighted by sin and materialism. C) supporting their attempts to preserve traditional values. D) providing good jobs and economic mobility for their children.