<span>Relations between the United States and Cuba had been steadily declining since Castro seized power in early 1959. U.S. officials were soon convinced that Castro’s government was too anti-American to be trusted, and they feared that he might lead Cuba into the communist bloc.</span>
Answers:
<u>Adam Smith
</u>
- Competition is a regulatory force.
<u>Friedrich von Hayek
</u>
- Less government intervention gives people more economic freedom.
<u>Milton Friedman</u>
- Government should not control the money supply.
<u>John Maynard Keynes
</u>
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Government intervention is necessary for stability.
Explanation:
Adam Smith's landmark work on <em>The Wealth of Nations </em>(1776) argued against government control of commerce and advocated for competition between business as a self-regulating sort of force.
Friedrich von Hayek's 1944 book <em>The Road to Serfdom </em>was an influential work of classical liberalisn in economics (what today we'd more likely call libertarianism).
Milton Friedmen was skeptical about the value of the Federal Reserve controlling the money supply.<em> Capitalism and Freedom </em>is a collection of his influential essays, published in 1962.
John Maynard Keynes proposed that increasing government expenditures and lowering taxes would stimulate demand and pull the economy out of a state of depression. His approach was adopted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal program, which sought to bring the United States out of the Great Depression.
Answer:
On May 18, 1896, the Supreme Court ruled in the case of Plessy v. Ferguson that "separate but equal" facilities were considered sufficient to satisfy the 14th Amendment. It wasn't until May 17, 1954, however, that the Court reversed the Plessy decision, bringing the era of government-sanctioned segregation to an end.
Explanation: