Asked by Makayla
Why were Americans disinterested in President Wilson's programs after the Great War?
Americans were tired of causes and reforms.
Americans wanted to forget the war and enjoy life.
America was too weak to follow up on them.
The programs were less expensive.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Answer: Americans were tired of causes and reforms.
Explanation: After World War I there was widespread fatigue with idealistic crusades (like Wilson’s internationalism and progressive reforms). Many voters wanted a “return to normalcy” — an end to reform agitation and foreign entanglements — and elected Republicans in 1920. (The other choices are incorrect: the U.S. was not too weak, and being “less expensive” would not cause disinterest.)
Explanation: After World War I there was widespread fatigue with idealistic crusades (like Wilson’s internationalism and progressive reforms). Many voters wanted a “return to normalcy” — an end to reform agitation and foreign entanglements — and elected Republicans in 1920. (The other choices are incorrect: the U.S. was not too weak, and being “less expensive” would not cause disinterest.)
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