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To be an isolationist is, to put it bluntly, to not get involved in anyone's business other than your own. An isolationist country doesn't enter into treaties or alliances with other countries, and it doesn't get involved in other countries' wars. It stays away from foreign affairs as much as possible.
Yes - in the questioning of the hierarchies that started such a disaster, the witnessing of Marxism in action in the new Soviet Russia, and America breaking its isolationist policy and becoming involved in Europe.
At the beginning of World War I, the US assumed an isolationist policy which basically means that we refused to get involved. While remaining isolationist, the US tried to get the other countries involved to declare peace.
It wanted to prevent slave revolts from spreading to its Caribbean colonies.
without involved in it is never being involved in it and becoming involved in it is we=hen you are going to get involving it.Well, that's what I think
The U.S. continued to stay an isolationist country because they felt like they shouldn't get involved in other countries business because that's the same reason why they went into WW1.
The US involved Vietnam War was NOT about imperialism. Imperialism means the acquiring of an empire...such as colonies. The US wanted to keep any nation free from "communism." South Vietnam was one of those countries.
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He did not want to be involved in the war because he held isolationist ideals. This means that he isolated the U.S. from the war, remaining neutral. He believed that becoming involved in the war could only be bad for our country.
Yes, they were involved. However, they were generally operating in opposition to the Zionists and tried to prevent Israel from becoming a state.
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The cause of the war involved European nations competing for control of colonies was boundary disputes.