The American colonists were eager to keep the Native American nations out of the mix when it came to the war with the British. The Native Americans could have looked at this as an opportunity to cause trouble for the white colonists and take advantage of the situation. Or the colonists could have looked at the Native American nations as potential allies and made promises to them if they assisted in the war effort. But the colonists appealed to native nations with a message of friendship -- not asking them to join in war against Britain, but also that they not act against the colonists' cause.
The quoted speech, by the way, was addressed to these Native American nations: <span>Mohawks, Oneidas, Tusscaroras, Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senekas.</span>
Answer:
You just answered your own question.
Explanation:
Punishment is the correct answer
<span>Good Morning!
</span><span>A dramatic increase in women's participation in the workforce
</span><span>
The intensification of women's work was a profound motivation for their requests for political space. Blacks had not yet gained their place in the 1800s because of the resistance of prejudice and their negative image to society, so it was not only a question of feminine equality with blacks, since even after the suffrage of the Afro- Americans, black women had to fight.
Hugs!</span>