1. It implements Iterable at the end of the line, which is why it has .iterator() and can be used in enhanced for loops. See what I mean by design?
2. It is a list, and there is a list interface that allows all lists to implement so that lists all include specific methods which will be used. It's silly to have different methods for every list.
3. It is a collection, therefore a Collections class can exist to hold utility methods used to manipulate with such collections. Collections is not a List because Sets also exists, and sets are not lists. Therefore, Collections exists as to provide a …