Asked by caleb
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Why were the majority of Russians willing to overthrow the tsar and establish a new, experimental government?
Almost all Russians were well-educated, innovative thinkers who hoped to bring the ideas of the Enlightened Era to their country.
The majority of Russians were barely able to survive in Russia's economy, and they were opposed Russia's involvement in World War I.
Most Russians thought that a new government would give Russia a greater military presence in the world and therefore more respect.
Russians had never liked the tsar, who was distant and cold, while they found Lenin charming and his socialist ideas a source of hope.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The best answer is:
The majority of Russians were barely able to survive in Russia's economy, and they were opposed to Russia's involvement in World War I.
Explanation: widespread poverty, food shortages, worker and peasant unrest, military defeats and huge wartime casualties, and the economic strain of WWI drove mass discontent and made many willing to overthrow the tsar and try a new government.
The majority of Russians were barely able to survive in Russia's economy, and they were opposed to Russia's involvement in World War I.
Explanation: widespread poverty, food shortages, worker and peasant unrest, military defeats and huge wartime casualties, and the economic strain of WWI drove mass discontent and made many willing to overthrow the tsar and try a new government.
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