President Jackson’s plan for dealing with the native Americans was signing the Indian removal act of 1830.
So your answer would be ‘he pushed a bill through Congress to move native Americans to the Great Plains.’
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
It's just because you're pro gamer. But really it's probably just because you're searching answers too fast or doing something how a robot would do that's very fast.
That depends which "Protestant ministers" you would have in mind. Protestantism has wide disparities within its ranks, and not all were on the same page. In the 19th century, most churches still stood against women's equality. But movements toward women's suffrage included many Protestant women, and beginning in the late 19th century liberal Protestantism was more likely to be in support of such movements. However, there remained (and still remain) many very conservative and traditional Protestant churches that are averse to giving women an equal role with men, basing their views on interpretations of Bible verses about men and women. They've tended to acknowledge women voting in political society as a reality, but keep women in a secondary place within the church's organization.
Catholic leaders in the 19th century maintained that women's suffrage was "an affront to divine law and the natural order and a threat to family and society," according to Susan Hill Lindley in the book, <em>You Have Stepped Out of Your Place: A History of Women and Religion in America </em>(1996).
Answer:
D. Mixing profits with philanthropy i believe either that or A. Using religion to justify the oil business
Explanation:
<span>The Toleration Act of 1649 made it a crime to restrict the religious rights of Christians and was the first law supporting religious tolerance passed in the English colonies. hope that answered your question.</span>