Answer:
Letter D. Distrustful
Explanation:
From the second half of the 18th century onwards, after the English victory in the Seven Years' War, the English economy was extremely shaken by the expenses with the war. With that, the eyes of the English Crown turned to its 13 colonies in America. The English Crown aimed at the urgent application of mercantilist legislation in the English colonies.
In addition, with the advent of the Industrial Revolution, England needed markets, but because of the relative colonial autonomy (healthy neglect) they always had, the colonies were never consumers of metropolitan production.
Thus, the Crown issued numerous decrees, considerably restricting the relative autonomy of both the northern and southern colonies. It was essential for England to transform its colonies into consumer markets for English production. This situation led the metropolis to close the siege by inspecting the colonies, instituting a series of taxes. How: The Sugar Law, the Stamp Law, the Tea Law, and the Intolerable Laws.
Revolted, the colonists did not accept the impositions adopted by the English Crown. In this climate of dissatisfaction and revolt among the colonists, libertarian ideals influenced by Enlightenment thinkers emerged. Aware of their strength, they refused to pay the fees and turned a blind eye to the taxed products. England was not prepared to negotiate and the clash between the colonists and the metropolis was inevitable. These factors triggered the war of independence for the 13 English colonies.
The French Revolution and the American Revolution
He made Christianity the main religion in Rome
I tend to agree with the perspective of Betty Friedan on this question.
Betty Friedan was an early leader of the feminist movement in the United States. Her important book, published in 1963, argued that women in America in the 1950s and early 1960s had an unfulfilling way of life. They were told that fulfillment and happiness as a woman came from being a wife, mother, homemaker. But her own studies showed that women were hungering for something else. They needed an identity of their own, not just from relation to husband, home and children.
You might want to see a bit more I said on this subject in response to someone else's question. Read more on Brainly.com -
brainly.com/question/8824227#readmore
Answer
number 3
hope this helps