The answer is definitely YES. The Truman administration, as well as the other two administrations before it, had violated the rights and freedoms of the Americans for the purpose of protecting the national security. The Truman administration began in the year 1945 when Harry S. Truman was the president.
Jackson--his presidency was marked by the Indian Removal Act and forced migration of the Cherokee people.
Jackson supported the right of white men to land access in the Southeast. Though the Cherokee had assimilated, owned land, and had created a democratic government they were still not white and therefore not fully accepted by the American people or society. Jackson supported Georgia's efforts to relocate the Cherokee which led to the Trail of Tears and relocation to Indian Territory now the state of Oklahoma.
The development of small villages into the first cities was known as "<span>b. Urban revolution," although this should not be confused with a more modern term in which people congregate more in pre-existing cities. </span>
1779vJohn Adams appointed to negotiate peace terms with British
Thomas Paine's response to the argument that the British have protected America is with the book 'Common Sense'
hope this helps