it was the corollary to the Monroe Doctrine and it said that the US had the right to interfere in the Western Hemisphere both to keep Europe out and to protect US interests
ex: Panama Canal
Security against the devastation caused by bank failures was not a part of the security program announced by President Roosevelt in his state of the union message.
Eight Presidents of the United States opposed the Central Bank also called the Federal Reserve. They were: President John F. Kennedy, President Harry Truman, President McKinley, President Roosevelt, President Johnson, and President John Quincy Adams .
There were two presidents named Roosevelt. The first was Theodore Roosevelt, and the second was Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The New Deal was Franklin Roosevelt's program for stimulating the economy.
Ok. Your statement is true.
it became more involved in dept problem in latin america (Apex)
False. (apex)
Extension of the Monroe Doctrine announced by Theodore Roosevelt in 1904, in which he proclaimed the right if the United States to police the Caribbean areas. It allowed the United States to collect customs, the major source of governmental revenue; and supervise government expenditures, including debt repayment.
This is false.The theme is the central message of a literary work.
The Roosevelt Corollary expanded America's role in Central America and the Caribbean.
it would be the theme
The "theme" is what the author is trying to convey, the central idea or message of the story. Not to be confused with plot, which is what happens in the story or moral, which is the lesson that is learned from the story.
an overthrow of Mussolini
Security against the devastation caused by bank failures was not a part of the security program announced by President Roosevelt in his state of the union message.
President Theodore Roosevelt was responsible for the building of the Panama Canal.
The central message of the Sermon on the Mount was to show that happiness depended much an individual's relationship with God. Jesus outlined nine happinesses in the Sermon on the Mount.
President Roosevelt's message could be directed to several different audiences depending on the specific context. It could be directed to the American people as a whole, to Congress, to world leaders, or to a specific group or organization he is addressing.