The Soviet move against the “Prague Spring” in 1968 demonstrated what became known as the “Brezhnev Doctrine,” namely:
a. That the Soviet Union would forcibly restrain any member country attempting to abandon socialism and the Soviet alliance.
b. That experimentation with free market principles would serve as a model for other Warsaw Pact states.
c. That attempts to centralize power in the Warsaw Pact states and impose new censorship restrictions would not be tolerated.
d. That Maoist doctrine was not compatible with Soviet Communism.
a. That the Soviet Union would forcibly restrain any member country attempting to abandon socialism and the Soviet alliance.
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Who benefited from the major reforms in Great Britain during the 1800s? What areas of British society were the primary focus of new laws?
What will be an ideal response?
The Tokugawa shoguns exerted control over the daimyo by
a. heavily taxing their lands. b. requiring the daimyo to marry into merchant families. c. compelling the daimyo to maintain two residences, one in their own domain and one in Edo. d. forbidding the daimyo ever to appear at Edo, the center of the shogun's rule. e. transferring the daimyos' lands to the peasant class.
In Qing China,
A. love was seen as a problem because it diverted a couple from their duties to the larger family. B. an ideal family unit consisted of only two generations living in one house. C. realistic social novels were published in China only in the early twentieth century. D. women held a uniquely honored position in the family because they bore the children E. romantic love was the norm.
Austrian physician Sigmund Freud contended that civilization's standards and laws
A. originated as a method to suppress sexual desires. B. serve to control base instincts. C. habitually repressed primal drives. D. are a response to an immense inner universe.