Because of the lack of details ill give an answer to the best of my ability id say The unknown rebel at the 1989 Tianaman protests he stood by his morals by stepping in front of the tanks even if they were gonna run him over he was eventually packed into the back of a van never to be seen again the people he was friends with claimed to not know who he was or ever existed.
Because slavery was central to their economy.
Answer:
Yeah, you're CORRECT: <u>class warfare and the growing power of concentrated capital</u>
Explanation:
We just need to look at what each writer/thinker wrote and we'll understand their political approach. Edward Bellamy, Henry George, and Laurence Gronlund were aligned with Socialism, each one on their way, of course. Because of that, their vision about society and how evolution would happen is strictly based on this political point of view. That's the reason they're worried about class warfare, once Socialism address that this event is inevitable and necessary. Those authors wanted to create a different approach for this "class warfare", and a good destination for the capital.
After the War of 1812, America' sense of social and political unity was at an all time high, especially after fending off the British for the second time in less than 50 years. To describe this period of American unity, a Boston newspaper described this time of the "Era of Good Feelings." This title represented both the unity in America's moral after defeating the British, but it also refers to the lack of arguing/fighting in politics. This era brought the collapse of the Federalist party, with only the Democratic-Republican party remaining. This party began to unit and settle several differences that divided them prior to the war. This era lasted less than a decade and would precede some of the most divisive eras in American history.
Answer:
The American Anti-Imperialist League was an organization established on June 15, 1898, to battle the American annexation of the Philippines as an insular area. The anti-imperialists opposed expansion, believing that imperialism violated the fundamental principle that just republican government must derive from "consent of the governed."