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1 July, 17:30

Which best explains why the Russian people began to speak out against the government during World War I? They were fearful of job loss and poverty as a result of a depression. They were angry that the country was running out of men to fight. They were weary of war and starving as a result of a famine. They were worried that industrialization was happening too fast.

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  1. 1 July, 18:55
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    The correct answer here is the third option.

    During the World War II the Eastern Front was hell (the Western was too, but at least they sat in the trenches, which did not take on the eastern front) and the number of dead was enormous. The war destroyed much of the country and the fields that produced food, so the people were starving. So they were sick of the war and of being hungry so they rose up against the government.
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