Asked by jaun
Use the political cartoon to answer the question.
A political cartoon shows an overweight Uncle Sam getting a new outfit made at a shop labeled 'McKinley and Company National Tailors.' President McKinley is taking Uncle Sam’s measurements for the outfit. Prominent anti-imperialists stand inside the entrance to the shop holding bottles labeled 'Anti-Expansion Policy.'
What do the labeled bolts of cloth represent in the political cartoon?
(1 point)
Responses
American involvement in other countries
American involvement in other countries
American noninterventionist beliefs
American noninterventionist beliefs
American domestic economic policy
American domestic economic policy
American support for foreign immigration
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
American involvement in other countries
The bolts of cloth symbolize territories/policies for U.S. expansion (imperialism) that McKinley is tailoring for Uncle Sam, which the anti‑imperialists oppose.
The bolts of cloth symbolize territories/policies for U.S. expansion (imperialism) that McKinley is tailoring for Uncle Sam, which the anti‑imperialists oppose.
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