In the southern colonies, Loyalism flourished among the wealthy elite of English heritage, but most backcountry settlers were slow to become involved in the controversy over imperial taxation. Most were yeoman farmers who were not rich and not English—they were of German, Scottish, or Scots-Irish heritage—and they were non-Anglican "dissenter" Protestants. Most significantly, they valued their isolation in the western hills and would fight to protect their liberty as independent frontiersmen. Yet as war became imminent, decisions were forced upon them. Pressured from both sides—by the wealthy Loyalists in their midst and the coastal Patriots who arrived to recruit them—backcountry men proved stubbornly resistant to recruiting, sermonizing, and fear mongering, as we see in the reports of determined but frustrated Patriot recruiters in the South Carolina backcountry.
Bismarck invaded France with his improved army. when bismarck drove all the french people and napoleon III out of France, that is when wilhelm II came in and became kaiser which unified Germany.
Nationalism because a liberal is a Democrat and that’s not correct and conservatism is a Republican and that’s incorrect and socialism is incorrect but a nationalism way of thinking wants our country to stay the same and for the sake of the USA
FDR had tried to pass legislation that would let him add up to six more justices. This was because the court had struck down some of his New Deal legislation and so he wanted more power. As shown though with the theory of separation of powers, it would have to go through Congress, who refused to allow the clause that let him "pack the courts" and as a result only reform for lower courts was passed and FDR failed in his main goals, but over his twelve years still appointed most of the justices that were on the court by the time his tenure as president ended.