American Homefront Causes

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Arguing leads to fights. Fights lead to battles. Battles lead to war. One of the most discussed wars in history would be World War II. The goal today is to decide how significant the impact of the war, World War II, was on the American homefront.
In order to accurately and precisely form a decision, two things need to be thoroughly addressed; what happened during World War II (the causes, effects, and everything in between), and what is the American homefront?
For, and only for organization and easy comprehension reasons, to begin this discussion the first thing to cover is World War II.
The alpha, the beginning, the cause. The very start of what overall led to the war itself was power, control, land. Japan, Italy, and Germany were all part of an alliance called the Axis Powers. Germany and Italy pushed for power in Europe, and Japan fought naval battles in the Pacific while supporting the Germans and Italians. Britain, France, America (post Pearl Harbor), Soviet
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Germany fought on two fronts, and the entire reason the war started was because Germany was invading countries for power... land... and yes, that would be correct... control. This was Hitler establishing the Third Reich, which was supposed to be one thousand years of world domination. As a strategy, Germany paired up with Japan to ensure that they would have control of all the islands in the pacific, and then Italy to ensure backup on one of their fronts to make it more difficult to destroy any stalemate that might occur like previously in WWI. The United States very badly wanted to stay out of the war, but when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, that was crossing the line. America helped push the Germans back. Eventually Germany got far enough back that Hitler (their ruler) committed suicide and that ended the war besides Japan still trying to fight their ground. The Allied leaders demanded Japanese surrender- (at this time

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