The correct answer is: A). It was too powerful.
Explanation:
<em>The Second National Bank</em> of the United States<em> was founded in 1816</em> being the successor bank of the National Bank created in 1791 by <em>George Washington and Alexander Hamilton. </em>
<em>President Andrew Jackson</em> view this bank as an<em> elitist institution</em> tied to Eastern commercial interests. He thought<em> it had more power than any other bank</em>, since it acted like a branch of government, and controlled a big part of the nation's gold. The Second National Bank was an institution <em>against democratic views</em>, making it's priority<em> to gain profit </em>and <em>not public service.</em>
The re-election campaign of President Andrew Jackson against Henry Clay <em>focused on the bank's future</em>, when he won he felt he received a mandate from the public to close the bank despite the objections of the Congress. He removed all federal funds on <em>September 10, 1833</em> and announced that after October 1 there wouldn't be any deposits to the bank. President Jackson destroyed the bank, and it's charter officially expired in 1836.<em> The Congress censured President Jackson </em>for an abuse of presidential power.
The French and Indian War began in 1754 and ended with the Treaty of Paris in 1763. The war provided Great Britain enormous territorial gains in North America, but disputes over subsequent frontier policy and paying the war's expenses led to colonial discontent, and ultimately to the American Revolution.
That the people should govern themselves but there should be a set number of laws. And someone to enforce these laws. And they should be very protective as to not let things slide. They didn't want to have a king they wanted a democracy where they would hold elections and the people got to choose there leader.