Because they grew up wanting equality. here is my reasoning:https://www.amazon.com/Hutzler-571-Banana-Slicer/dp/B0047E0EII/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&*Version*=1&*...
1857, Roger B. Taney delivered his opinion as chief justice in the Dred Scott v Sandford. In it, he said that Dred Scott was not a U.S. citizen, so he could not sue in U.S. courts that he was a free man. Taney ruled that Scott was bound by Missouri's slave code because he lived in Missouri. Scott's time in free territory did not matter in this case. Taney argued that congress could not ban slavery in the territories. To do so, would violate the slaveholder's property rights, protected by the Fifth Amendment. In effect, Taney declared legislation such as the Missouri compromise unconstitutional.
The correct answer is the Monroe Doctrine.
The Monroe Doctrine focused on preventing future European influence in the Western hemisphere. President Monroe promised that the US would not interfer with any European colonies that were already established at the time of this doctrine (1823). However, Monroe went on to say that any future attempts at colonization would be met with a US military response.
The ultimate goal of this was to isolate the US from European conflicts.
I am guessing you are talking about the U.S president and its Thomas Jefferson
Answer:
D. she got arrested
Explanation:
Annie Mae Young was recounting one of her past experiences.
Martin Luther King was cherished and loved by almost everyone in the community, Gee's Bend at Alabama. After the long wait for his arrival, he arrived and planned their mode of marching with him. But unfortunately, Young and her friends were put into jail by Sheriffs. Thus could not join the people who marched with Martin Luther King.
Some of the people who marched lost their homes, while some lost their jobs.