Because there were bigger, stronger, older nations that would
have loved to get their hands on that rich territory that the United
States covered ... France, England, Spain, etc. Washington knew
that the young USA could only survive as a nation if the people
remained united, and all those things ... taking sides in international
conflict (not remaining neutral), national debt, sectionalism (north
against south, east against west, old states against new states),
political parties (Whigs against Tories, Republicans against
Democrats), are things that could set groups of the people
against each other.
A strong desire to do or to achieve something, typically requiring determination and hard work.
The reason why the Romans wanted to extend their dominion to the Alps was that C. The Alps were a mountain range that provided a natural barrier to invasion.
<h3>Why did the Romans want to reach the Alps?</h3>
The Alps were located in Northern Italy and were a range of mountains which were hard to scale, especially with an invading force.
This meant that if Rome reached the Alps, they would only worry less about invasions thanks to the Alps being a natural barrier to groups trying to invade Roman land.
Find out more on the Roman empire at brainly.com/question/12047731
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Well, uniting against a common enemy has always been a great unifier. Plus, literally fighting for freedom made every person fighting believe very deeply in their cause, and so they could overcome differences with each other for that cause.