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| Powers of the british government |
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| slogan calling for US continental republic |
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| spreading nation's power over other lands |
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| US avoidance of overseas involvement |
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| the 1947 presidential call to aid countries under communist threat. |
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| The 1947 call for massive US aid to war-torn Europe |
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| Senator Joseph McCarthy's early-1950s accusations of treason in high places. |
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| Idealistic projection of U.S. power to create a peaceful world. |
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| U.S. interests extending everywhere |
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| The 1964 congressional permissionfor president to go to war in vietnam. |
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| The impact of geography on international politics |
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| Getting an army ready for immediate war. |
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| Unreasonably suspicious of others |
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| tendency to see the enemy as stronger than it is |
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| The ingredients of economic growth: labor, capital, raw materials, energy. |
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| The top or most influential people |
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| how efficiently goods are produced-- that is using fewer inputs. |
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| The bulk of population with little interest or influence |
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| Leading or dominating other countries |
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| Soviet intelligence and security police |
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