If you give the available answers with your question you are more likely to get the right response
This is a hard one... but I believe it is either C or D. We know that wounded Allied soldiers were a big issue during the war and a big reason as to why the U.S. joined was to gain land and protect its allies that it related to (mainly being Britain). D is also a reasonable answer, but I highly doubt it is the other options. Double check your history book, but I think the answer is C.
Barabbas will be your answer
he was a thief and murderer(?)
In the early 20th cent., the court appeared to be highly conservative in its views. It showed in general a rigid adherence to stare decisis
(the rule that precedents are to be followed), a tendency to prevent
the states from adopting laws that restricted business in its employment
practices and other activities, and little disposition to restrain the
states from restricting civil liberties, as in the Plessy v. Ferguson
case (1896), which upheld the right of states to enforce
segregationist Jim Crow legislation in many Southern states. In the
Insular Cases (1901), arising out of questions concerning the status of
peoples in the territories acquired as a result of the Spanish American
War, the court asserted that the civil rights guaranteed by the
Constitution did not automatically apply to the people of an annexed
territory, i.e., the Constitution did not follow the flag.
hope it helps
Answer:
Psychologically and politically.
Explanation:
The battle of Antietam was not crucial, Lincoln hoped it would be. However, the Union was now in a position to psychologically, politically and economically attack the Confederacy. In January 1863, Lincoln published the Emancipation Proclamation. The text implied freedom for all people controlled by the Union and freedom became a military objective so that as time progressed, more and more slaves were freed and joined the Union troops.
And if the proclamation did not have much resonance among Southerners, surely such a Lincoln attitude was psychological of exceptional value for the continuation of the war. The proclamation of emancipation brought with it a political victory, it was an official step towards the abolition of slavery, and the rest of the world was viewed by the Confederacy as barbarians still nurturing slavery.