AP world MCQ unit 8
Which of the following best explains the similarity between Hutu views of the Tutsi in the "Hutu Ten Commandments" and the treatment of Jews in Nazi Germany?
Both the Tutsi and Jews were persecuted based on ethnic prejudice.
The "Hutu Ten Commandments" is best explained as being part of which of the following continuities in twentieth-century history?
Extremist groups using propaganda to target specific minority populations
Wilhelm II's assurances in the second paragraph that "nobody is threatening the honor or power of Russia" and that the tsar can "well afford" to await the results of attempts to defuse the crisis best testify to the importance of which of the following factors in the outbreak of the First World War?
Intense nationalism, fueled by mass media, often forced the hand of military and political leaders.
The image can best help explain which of the following differences between the Nazi program of genocide and other acts of genocide in the early twentieth century?
The Nazis industrialized the killing process, allowing them to commit murder on a massive scale.
All of the following statements about the Hutu and Tutsi ethnic groups in Rwanda are factually accurate. Which would best explain how the attitudes expressed in the "Hutu Ten Commandments" were a reaction to past developments in Rwandan history?
The Tutsi were heavily favored and promoted to positions of power under European colonial rule, while the Hutu were not.
The point of view that Hitler expresses in the first three paragraphs is most directly significant in helping to explain how which of the following contributed to starting the Second World War?
The provisions of the Treaty of Versailles that ended the First World War
The unrest reflected in the image is best explained by which of the following features of the Russian government at the time of the photograph?
The tsarist regime that governed Russia was autocratic and unresponsive to calls for reform.
Based on the historical situation in which the speech was given, Hitler's most significant motivation for giving the speech was likely to continue to
reinforce the idea to the German people that past injustices required Germany to continue its military buildup and engage in future territorial expansion