The escalation of the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal led to distrust among the public of the American government. Up until the 1960's and 1970's, Americans were typically approving of the government. They patriotically followed President Roosevelt into World War II and praised the government for helping them out of the Great Depression. The government played it relatively safe in the '50's and Americans didn't mind because they were experiencing great prosperity and didn't want to get involved in another major war. By the time the '60's and '70's rolled around, the Vietnam War was a source of contention because people didn't really agree with the war and the government began hiding information and lying to the public to maintain what little support they still had. The real hit came when Nixon became implicated in the Watergate scandal causing the public to mistrust the government even more. Both of these events demonstrated to the American public that the great leaders of America aren't as great as they're played up to be.
Abolitionists have prevented opponents from explaining their reasonable counterpoints
The Union and Confederacy were both against each other's Slavery Territory which caused the North and South to divide
Answer:
Magna Carta was very important for the whole development of parliament. First of all it asserted a fundamental principle that taxation needed the consent of the kingdom. Secondly, it made taxation absolutely necessary for the king because it stopped up so many sources of revenue.
Explanation:
Between the reigns of Marcus Aurelius and Diocletian, bad leaders ruled in between. While both of the mentioned rulers served and were considered to have been good roman rulers, others that came in between weren't considered as good with their reigns rather short-lived.