A dictatorship government
Answer: The option that best describes a plantation in the 180s is C. a family-owned agricultural estate, usually in the South. At the time, most of the farms and plantations were found in the South, because that land was always more agriculturally-inclined, whereas the North was more interested in technology than in nature. At the time, there weren't many companies or factories, but rather farms created in the South where slaves were brought to work.
It sparked investigations into the attacks, as well as the ongoing War on Terrorism in Afghanistan. The response included funds for affected families, plans for the War on Terrorism, rebuilding of Lower-East Manhattan, and the invasion of Iraq and Afghanastan. The Bush administration had issued a war on terrorism. This was a goal to bring Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda to justice and preventing disturbance from other terrorist networks. The U.S. was not the only nation to increase its military readiness.
Several of these related to labor issues highlighted by the 1886 <u>Great Southwest Strike</u> by the <u>Knights of Labor</u>, governmental land policy, and railroad regulation. The most controversial demands, however, related to monetary reform. Believing that significant relief from declining crop prices required the expansion of the currency supply, alliance farmers demanded that the government immediately use silver in addition to gold as legal tender in order to ease the contracted currency supply. They argued, however, that significant relief required a more radical revamping of the existing monetary system than entailed by "free silver"-the establishment of a fiat currency system wherein the government would issue "greenbacks" based on a predetermined per capita circulation volume, rather than on an inflexible metallic standard.