Answer:
The answer you're looking for A On January 8, 1835, President Andrew Jackson achieves his goal of entirely paying off the United States’ national debt. It was the only time in U.S. history that the national debt stood at zero, and it precipitated one of the worst financial crises in American history.
The elimination of the national debt was both a personal issue for Jackson and the culmination of a political project as old as the nation itself. Since the time of the Revolution, American politicians had argued over the wisdom of the nation carrying debt. After independence, the federal government agreed to take on individual states’ war debts as part of the unification of the former colonies. Federalists, those who favored a stronger central government, established a national bank and argued that debt could be a useful way of fueling the new country’s economy. Their opponents, most notably Thomas Jefferson, felt that these policies favored Northeastern elites at the expense of rural Americans and saw the debt as a source of national shame.
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<span>established in 321 BCE in the wake of Alexander the Great's conquest of part of India.
t</span>he empire was led by three major emperors,Chandragupta Maurya<span> (321-298 BCE), </span>Bindusara<span> (298-272 BCE), and Ashoka (272-232 BCE).</span>
<span>a liturgical formula of praise to God.
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Literally what the dude above me said
1999 <span>In 1977, responding to nearly 20 years of
Panamanian protest, U.S. President Jimmy Carter and Panama's General
Omar Torrijos signed two new treaties that replaced the original 1903 agreement and called for a transfer of canal control in <span>1999</span></span>