Answer:
its an opinion question-
The Federalists wanted to ratify the Constitution, the Anti-Federalists did not. One of the major issues these two parties debated concerned the inclusion of the Bill of Rights.
Explanation:
<u>The abolition movement:</u>
- Slavery was seen by the abolitionists as a monstrosity and an abnormality on the United States, rendering it their mission to abolish slave ownership.
- They submitted letters to Congress, stood for political office and overwhelmed the people of the South with publications against slavery.
- The antagonism and resentment sparked by the revolution, along with other variables, led to the Civil War and eventually to the end of American slavery.
<u>The second great awakening:</u>
- In US, at the early time of 19th century, a Protestants spiritual movement expanded Christianity via revivals and intense preaching brought popularity as the "second great awakening".
- Such campaign prompted a series of transformation measures that drew hundreds of converts into new Protestant denominations, which ultimately resulted into a period of antebellum social change and an institutional focus on redemption.
- Over the time their American people grew rapidly, characterizing its territorial expansion by the great leap westward and brought relief as a result of socio-political shifts in America, in the face of instability.
<span>The military was not strong enough to protect Europe.
The Vikings were a formidable force, and the English (in the example given) were not organized or managed well enough to withstand such invasions. An English scholar, Alcuin, who became a key figure in Charlemagne's court, even went so far as to say that the Vikings were a manifestation of God's wrath against the immorality of the European people.
</span>
Both conflicts were motivated by the writings of john locke and charles de montesquieu. - for apex