The answers totally B, dude
Here's the thing: President Lincoln had absolutely no way to actually enforce the Emancipation Proclamation. It was a mere gesture.
Now, he had his reasons for making such a gesture.
For one, Lincoln hoped that, when the slaves heard that they had been granted their freedom, the sudden wave of freedmen, as they would come to be called, would help disrupt the war effort.
Perhaps some of these freedmen would join the Union army. That was another small reason.
As for why he didn't extend the Proclamation to the entire country...well, the thing was, he planned to.
Lincoln's greatest ambition was to free the slaves. But even in the North, there existed strong racism. Plus, some Northerners had slaves too, and Lincoln needed the North's support, not only to win the war, but also to support the Thirteenth Amendment he planned to propose after the war ended. This Thirteenth Amendment would make outlaw slavery in the United States forever.
You might think it too high to say 90% ... but it really was 90% of funding for the Interstate Highway system that was provided by Congressional funding. This was a huge program signed into law during the presidency of Dwight Eisenhower. It was considered essential to the national interest. The Federal-Aid Highway Act passed in 1956 allocated $26 billion (in 1956 dollars!) to this monumental road-building effort.
Answer:
The Northern free states also were proved to produce more crops than the South, even with the North having considerably smaller labor force than the South's slave industry. ... The North's increased crops is most likely due to the recent invention of many farming machines that the South did invent and utilize.
I just need points The the answer is C