Answer:
C. It started the Doctrine of Nullification
Explanation:
The trouble began with the <u>Tariff of 1828</u>. The South was afraid the high tariff would hurt their trade with Europe. South Carolina talked about nullifying the tariff. The argument over the <u>"Doctrine of Nullification"</u> was debated in the Senate. Senator Robert Hayne of South Carolina concluded that if a law was harmful to a particular state, it was the right of that state to declare the law null and void. Daniel Webster of Massachusetts argued that only the Supreme Court could declare a law null and void. He ended his speech with this famous quotation: "Liberty and Union now and forever, one and inseparable."
Answer:
American victory on Lake Champlain saved New York from possible British invasion via the Hudson River valley.
Answer:
a war that is unrestricted in terms of the weapons used, the territory or combatants involved, or the objectives pursued, especially one in which the laws of war are disregarded.
Explanation:
There is an agreement of price and quantity in the market therefore all market forces stabilized and reached a price that consumers are willing to pay for goods and producers a price at which they are willing to produce in order to make a profit