Superpower

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    My hero is The Flash. The flash is a fictional character that got superpower when a lighting bolt hit him and it was sketch from The Arrow. It was created by Carmine infantino , Harry Lampert, Robert Kanigher and John Broome. The character is played by Grant Gustin. The flash real name is Barry Allen. Barry Allen is a scientist for the police station in Central city. The reason the flash is my hero because he has superpower that make him lighting fast. He got his speed from being hit by…

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    Gun Shot Research Paper

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    I sat down with my family to watch the 2012 World Olympics, wearing my USA tee shirt I was excited and ready to cheer on my country team. We watched as the broadcasters conversed about the world fastest runners, while the athletes warmed up and took the field for the big race. Journalist snapping their cameras, I focused on there lively expressions of this exciting and memorable event. Suddenly the blistering gun shot signified that the race has begun, and applause spread through the crowd like…

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    Orwell's Criticism

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    '1984' forms the title for a 1949 novel by George Orwell. The novel, set in the province of Oceania depicts dystopia in theme and is packed witch culturally significant predictive lessons to the current and future generation. Dystopias pose the worst-case scenarios to everyday life, therefore, criticizing current trends, societal norms, and political systems. '1984' is set in a futuristic environment. '1984' depicts a world with endless war, vigilant surveillance, and opportunistic political…

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    discussion and online research throughout the subject matter, it is clear the two most primary reasons for World War I to begin included the fact that Militarism, also known as the armaments race throughout Europe caused mass competition throughout the superpowers. Alliances also caused for a great tension between nations, as the smallest act could create a large…

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    doctrines. During this time of tension, both sides employed brinkmanship, or the practice of pushing a dangerous situation to the limits of safety, with the intent of forcing the other side to concede. This strategy pushed the war’s two remaining superpowers to engage in an intense political standoff, with the potential for nuclear Armageddon at just the push of a button. An infamous example of this nuclear brinkmanship was the Cuban Missile Crisis. After U.S. President John F. Kennedy…

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    different than other nations; however we must separate the idea of different from the ideal of better, which is inherent in the term coined American Exceptionalism. The egotistic nature of America is destroying our international ties, even though our superpower status has the ability to keep us going. The power of the military industrial complex, in addition to our empirical tendencies are terrifying; for, all historic empires have collapsed sooner or later. I urge the American people to…

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    eliminated. The result of that view was an estimated 20 million dead people by the time Stalin died. However, because he created a situation where his idea was the only idea he was able to turn the USSR’s economy around, established the USSR as a world superpower, created free education and advanced healthcare, and also put…

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    The start of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union after the Second World War began a series of standoffs and conflicts between the two superpowers. This conflict however, did not remain in the two countries and because both desired dominance over one another but did not want all out war, the conflicts were played out in weaker or smaller countries and regions of the world such as in the Middle East. The United States was attracted to the Middle East due to the containment…

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    (Waltz). United States and the Soviet Union were sovereign and thus were autonomous to each other. The Cold War in the 20th century was a bi-polar competition between the United States and the Soviet Union known as the cold war between the two superpowers with opposing ideologies. The United States and its allies were supporting capitalism and the Soviets and their allies standing by communism. China has an authoritarian political regime with a capitalist system and does not…

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    Cold War Unilateralism

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    This historical study will define the underlying events that define the economic and military unilateralism of the American superpower in the later half of the 20th century. The wartime policies of president Johnson define shift in the monolithic military power of the United States in the 1960s as a direct result of Cold War ideology with the U.S.S.R. and China. America’s entrance into the Vietnam War defined Johnson’s pro-war ideology, which sought to prevent the domino effect of communism in…

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