A more aggressive tightening of monetary supply by the Federal Reserve could have deflated the market and perhaps helped avoid the crash. The Fed then blundered by tightening after the crash, making the problem worse and extending the Great Depression.
The three pillars of absolutism in tsarist Russia are "Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationalism".
<u>Option: C</u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
Absolutism progressively evolved in Russia during the 17th and 18th centuries. It superseded the Moscow Grand Duchy's despotism. Under Byzantine principles Ivan III established and laid the groundwork for the tsarist autocracy, a structure that would rule Russia for centuries with some differences. Orthodoxy: strong ties between both the Russian Orthodox Church and the Govt; Autocracy: absolute state power; Nationalism: reverence for Russian values and abolition throughout the empire of non-Russian communities adopted by Nicholas I and not very popular.
Due to many foreigners the Chinese had developed a better sense of Nationalism, so the answer is B.
<span>If you are talking about Rii’s work called, “ How the Other Half Lives: Studies among the Tenements of New York,” then you are referring to his photojournalism work in the 1890s.
Jacob Rii was a man known to have exposed the life of New York’s slums into the middle and upper class. He exposed the truth about how people actually survive and live under these conditions. Through this he has inspired many reforms of working-class housing and made a great and lasting impact in today’s society.<span>
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