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20 January, 15:30

How does roosevelt support the idea that wartime production will have hurdles

a) by talking about early time management

b) by focusing on how assembly works

c) by explaining in simple terms what it involves

d) by saying that production will be steady

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Answers (2)
  1. 20 January, 17:41
    0
    The answer is letter a because he only makes this statement to show that whoever there is needs to be prepared.
  2. 20 January, 19:23
    0
    FDR's early foreign policy decisions were based largely on what he believed to be in America's best interests. The United States and sixty-five other nations, in the wake of the worldwide Depression, sent delegates to the London Economic Conference in the summer of 1933. Roosevelt had seemed committed to the goals of the conference-to stabilize national currencies on a worldwide front. But Roosevelt had not openly agreed to any of the avowed goals of the conference. When it came to deciding between the gold juggling policies of the first months of the New Deal that seemed to be beneficial for the country or a policy that would have ambiguous short-term effects at home, he chose against worldwide gain and for America alone. His actions angered the rest of the delegates, who called a recess in the conference-a recess that eventually became an adjournment. The world returned to suffering in isolation, a trend that would encourage the rise of the dictators whose ambitions created the Second World War.
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