William Penn, the founding character of the colony of Pennsylvania was a Quaker-Whig who sought the opportunity for religious choice and absence of oppression which he faced in England. When determining the founding principles for Pennsylvania Penn relied on self-governance and freedom of religion and religious practices.
Initially, the settlers of Pennslyvania and Penn were in agreement about the structure of government needed in the colony, however, over time the representative body sought the right to pass laws over the people living the town, something Penn opposed. None the less, Penn endorsed representative government over self-governance and agreed to the passage of laws in the colony.
Answer:
It will end the world lol.
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Answer:
The right answer is:
Because he believed that he would lead the people to revolt against unfair laws.
Explanation:
Very restrictive laws were passed by Congress during the presidency of John Adams in the last years of the 1790s decade. A war with France was seen as probable, so the Adams administration asked for harsh laws that created much disatisfaction among citizens. They were called the Allien and Sedition Acts. Their critics said they severely restricted civic freedoms and constitutional rights. With the public mood against the laws, Thomas Jefferson campaigned against them and won the presidency in 1800.
It’s 50 points it says not 100 btw only the first question ?
The answer is the (Ruhr area)