I would have to say it was either A. or B. I hope this helps!
This question is tough to answer, since perceptions of Manifest Destiny changed radically across the 19th century.
But many American citizens, politicians, and thinkers genuinely believed in the tenets of Manifest Destiny, so it's not fair to say that these Americans were simply manufacturing a false excuse for westward expansion. So we can exclude C.
It's also true that many other Americans (especially Southern Democrats) used the idea of Manifest Destiny to justify invading Mexico in the 1840s. Bu these Southerners were more interested in adding new slaveholding states to the Union than they were with fending off a potential enemy in Mexico (which was a vastly weaker military power).
And while much of America throughout the 19th century was indeed Protestant, and that most of the residents of Mexican territories were Catholic, Manifest Destiny was less interested in dismantling Catholic influence than it was in advancing its own expansionist, Protestant interests.
You'll want to double-check with your textbook to be sure about the context of this question, but the best answer from this angle seems to be B, since those Americans who did believe in Manifest Destiny certainly believed that westward advancement was not only obvious but sanctioned by God.
I would say winston churchill.
- A law to promote the defense of the United States was passed by the US Congress on February 18, 1941. It enabled the United States to deliver essential materials such as weapons, ammunition, vehicles, fuel, food, planes, etc. to the countries fighting against the Axis powers (Germany, Italy, Japan).
Answer:
Liberal
Explanation:
Liberal policies generally emphasize the need for the government to solve problems.
Answer:
The treatment of Native Americans after the American Revolution was that the new nation did not consider Native Americans to be citizens and moved forward inland expansion without considerations for them. The British and the Americans disregarded the Native Americans in the Peace negotiations.
Explanation:
American Revolution broke the Iroquois confederation. The Oneida tribe helped the Americans in the war against the British. The Mohawks helped and fought for the British. However, the British and Americans betrayed them. The Confederacy broken, prestige, and lost power. The America military in revenge for Iroquois help of the British attacked the lands of the Seneca, the Cayuga, and the Mohawks. The orchards were expurgated, fields flattened and the land occupied. The culture that had generated the democratic state of the Iroquois was harmed.
• The Native American communities on both sides were badly treated in diplomatic determinations from both sides. This was because of their lack of representation.
• The Creek Native American and the Cherokee tribes were amid those to join the British.
• England sworn the Native Americans land if they struggled with them.
• Four of the six Iroquois tribes struggled for the British while the other two struggled for the Americans.
• In spite of being a huge assistance to the British, the Native Americans were never embodied in the military and political determinations.
• A lot of land of The Native Americans were lost to the Americans after their triumph. This distorted their whole lifestyles as they were repeatedly pressed westward.
• Most Native American communities thought that independence of America would be a greater danger to their way of life than American colonial.