Asked by Makayla
Select the changes the United States experienced after World War I:
disarmament
urbanization
restrictive immigration
a return to noninvolvement in world affairs
active military intervention
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct selections: disarmament; urbanization; restrictive immigration; a return to noninvolvement in world affairs.
Brief reasons:
- Disarmament: the U.S. led and participated in postwar arms-limitation efforts (e.g., Washington Naval Conference, 1921–22).
- Urbanization: by the 1920 census more Americans lived in cities than rural areas; the 1920s saw rapid urban growth.
- Restrictive immigration: the Emergency Quota Act (1921) and Immigration Act of 1924 sharply limited immigration.
- Return to noninvolvement: the U.S. rejected the League of Nations and adopted an isolationist foreign-policy stance in the 1920s.
"Active military intervention" is not a broad postwar trend — the U.S. generally moved toward isolationism, though limited interventions (e.g., in the Caribbean/Central America) continued.
Brief reasons:
- Disarmament: the U.S. led and participated in postwar arms-limitation efforts (e.g., Washington Naval Conference, 1921–22).
- Urbanization: by the 1920 census more Americans lived in cities than rural areas; the 1920s saw rapid urban growth.
- Restrictive immigration: the Emergency Quota Act (1921) and Immigration Act of 1924 sharply limited immigration.
- Return to noninvolvement: the U.S. rejected the League of Nations and adopted an isolationist foreign-policy stance in the 1920s.
"Active military intervention" is not a broad postwar trend — the U.S. generally moved toward isolationism, though limited interventions (e.g., in the Caribbean/Central America) continued.
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