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Which statement describes public opinion in the United States before and during the Spanish-American War? (3 points) Journalists had an important influence on Americans' attitudes about the war. Labor unions rallied a reluctant public to give full support to the war effort. U.S. citizens had little confidence in the ability of the United States to win the war quickly. U.S. citizens were highly critical of President McKinley's decisions.

User Bastiaan
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Answer:

The answer is c.

Journalists had an important influence on Americans' attitudes about the war.

Step-by-step explanation:

Because i got it right on the test.

User Prem Parihar
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The correct answer is: "Journalists had an important influence on Americans' attitudes about the war"

The term Spanish-American war describes the conflict that started in 1898 due to the intervention of the US in the Cuban War of Independence, that was being fought between Spain, the colonist power, and Cuba.

The intervention of the US in the conflict was justified by the US goverment due to humanitarian reasons, although historians really put this in doubt. The fact was that the yellow press in the US continously published the atrocities that the Spanish were commiting against the Cuban civilians, in an extremely exagerated manner. As a result, those publications contributed to position the US public opinion in favour of the intervention, as they regarded the Spanish as monsters. The intervention was triggered due to the explosion of the USS Maine in the Habana Harvor, that was considered an attack perpetrated by the Spanish although, even nowadays, the cause is still unknown.


User Paul Pepper
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