They believed in a system that rewarded hard work with wealth.
The motto of United States is that it is a country of opportunities where everyone can prosper if they work hard and if they are smart enough, not that it is a country where you have no progress and you stagnate. This was deeply embedded in the mindset of the Americans who firmly believed that with hard work you can progress and get promotions, and run your own business, and get wealthy because they have deserved it, so Marxism came as a very repulsive ideology that was rejected immediately.
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C. Existence of sharp economic differences between social classes.
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musingly, on-screen characters in Ancient Greece were called scoundrels, or to utilize the Ancient Greek: hypokrites. The purpose behind this is still discussed however is likely in light of the fact that hypokrites is an amalgamation of two Greek words generally signifying "to choose underneath," alluding to being underneath the veils worn by Ancient Greek on-screen characters.
Low wages poor conditions while working and the poverty that was spreading around it
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The Civil War wasn't about slavery.
The most widespread myth is also the most basic. Across America, 60 percent to 75 percent of high-school history teachers believe and teach that the South seceded for state's rights, said Jim Loewen, author of "Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong" (Touchstone, 1996) and co-editor of "The Confederate and Neo-Confederate Reader: The 'Great Truth' about the 'Lost Cause'" (University Press of Mississippi, 2010).
"It's complete B.S.," Loewen told LiveScience. "And by B.S., I mean 'bad scholarship.'"
In fact, Loewen said, the original documents of the Confederacy show quite clearly that the war was based on one thing: slavery. For example, in its declaration of secession, Mississippi explained, "Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery — the greatest material interest of the world … a blow at slavery is a blow at commerce and civilization." In its declaration of secession, South Carolina actually comes out against the rights of states to make their own laws — at least when those laws conflict with slaveholding. "In the State of New York even the right of transit for a slave has been denied by her tribunals," the document reads. The right of transit, Loewen said, was the right of slaveholders to bring their slaves along with them on trips to non-slaveholding states.
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