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The acts were laws passed in 1935, 1936, 1937, and 1939 to limit U.S. involvement in future wars. The 1935 act banned munitions exports to belligerents(countries that were engaged in warfare.in this case, specifically WW2) and restricted American travel on belligerent ships. The 1936 act banned loans to belligerents. The 1937 act extended these provisions to civil wars and gave the president discretionary authority to restrict nonmunitions sales to a "cash‐and‐carry" basis (belligerents had to pay in advance then export goods in their own ships).The 1939 act banned U.S. ships from carrying goods or passengers to belligerent ports but allowed the United States to sell munitions, although on a "cash‐and‐carry" basis. Congress repealed the Neutrality Acts on 13 November 1941. (i largely copied and pasted this answer from this site: http://www.answers.com/topic/the-neutrality-acts)
Yes, obviously, it said that we were to remain neutral, but there were actually a series of them - in 1935, '36, '37, and '39. The first imposed an embargo (an order of government prohibiting movement of merchant ships in and out of the country's ports) on arms trading with countries at war, and also warned Americans that they traveled at their own rish on warring ships. The second improved that by prohibiting trade in war materials as well as loans or credits to belligerents (people engaged in warfare or eager to fight). But it didn't cover civil wars or materials like trucks and oil, so many companies used this loophole. The '37 Act(s) was/were in response to the Spanish civil war; it tightened restrictions on US businesses and private individuals assisting belligerents, and prohibited travel by US citizens on ships of belligerents. Finally, the '39 Neutrality Act amended the earlier legislation in recognition of the imminent Nazi threat to western Europe's democracies. It permitted all belligerents to be supplied on a "cash and carry" basis (required buyers to send their own ships to US ports). It also forbid US vessels from entering combat zones, and citizens continued to be barred from sailing on belligerent vessels. (This was amended in November, 1941.)
Dollar Diplomacy
These groups made loans and provided legal assistance
When she is trying to pay back the loans
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child support is for the child .
claiming it wanted to protect European investments and loans.
US had lent a lot of money to the Allies since the beginning of the war. If the Allies lost, the chances of US getting these loans repaid any time soon were slim. America HAD to enter WW1 to protect its long time financial investment in the Allied cause .
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limit U.S. involvement in possible future wars and that was created in response to the belief that U.S. involvement in http://www.answers.com/topic/world-war-i resulted from loans and trade with the http://www.answers.com/topic/allied-powers. The 1935 act banned the shipment of war materials to belligerents and forbade U.S. citizens to travel on belligerent vessels. The 1936 act banned loans to belligerents. The 1937 act extended these provisions to civil wars and allowed the president to restrict nonmunitions sales to a "cash-and-carry" basis.
student loans child support
no
Aided industry trough tariffs and loans
Of course as long as you have the income to support both loans. If you are past due with your school loans the process will be much more difficult.
no it will stay with you forever like student loans
most taxes, child support, student loans and criminal fines