The correct answer to this open question is the following.
I think the U.S. backed down on its enforcement of the Treaty once gold was discovered in the Black Hills because the United States federal government had already signed and formalized the Treaty of Laramie in 1868, in which the government recognized that region of Black Hills as a territory of the Sioux Native American Indian tribe.
Let's have in mind that although large gold deposits were found in 1875 in Deadwood Gulch, Black Hills territory and thousands of people went there to find fortune, the territory already belonged to the Lakotas and the Sioux.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Unfortunately, you forgot to include the name of the individual who expresses the argument of liberty. Who are you referring to?
It could be anyone, A politician, a founding father, a diplomat, a freedom fighter, a Patriot. Who?
Trying to help you, we can comment on the following.
Doing some research, there is a concept of Liberty expressed by Federalists Founding Father James Madison in one of the Federalist's Papers. James Madison wrote: "Liberty... is essential to [factions] existence”
What Madison tried to say with that quote was that every faction was the product of a way of thinking, of a political belief system expressed with liberty. And that political factions were the result of the ideas of men who freely decided what could be the best for the country and that is why they formed factions or political parties, to support these ideas and present them to the American people.
Answer:
In 1828, the Mexican government sent General Manuel de Mier y Terán on a mission to determine the United States-Mexico boundaries between the Red and Sabine rivers. Mier y Terán’s mission also included studying the number of Anglo-American settlers in Texas and determining the attitudes of those living in Texas.
Explanation:
I got it right on edge 2020