The Southern States had different opinions from the Northern States.
The Southern States wanted to keep
- Slavery
- State-Based Rule, not a Central Government
The Northern States wanted the opposite. Those were 2 MAIN reasons why the Southern States left. There were MANY other factors to this as well, such as the Missouri Compromise line, that rule was broken when the Northerners got California and other land that passed that line. Then there was also Bleeding Kansas which fueled both side's anger. Many slaves escaped into the Northern States to become free, and the Southerners passed laws that punished any Northerners that aided this process, the result was, tensions rose.
Overall, there was so many factors to the secession of the Southern States that you would have to spend quite a bit of time and you would have to analyze each occurrence and see which had the greatest impacts.
The two main that I found were
- Slaves
- South wanted more power to States, North wanted Central Government
Hope it was of use. Good luck!
Answer:
C makes the most sense out of all
Explanation: conflict has led to many geographical shifts mainly in Europe. You have WW1 examples which resulted in many conflicts given all the violence that there was. You have treaties made without other countries’ consents like the Treaty of Versailles. You also have the creation of new countries such as Poland, Yugoslavia, Lithuania, Latvia, the separation or independence of Hungary from Austria. Those small countries surrounding Russia were brought up to stop the spread of communism, since communism was spreading like a “plague” therefore communism wouldn’t reach the powers. Then you had Poland which was established and was used in other to block Russia’s attempt of fighting for land from the regions of the great powers. Poland was there as a sort of blockade between Russia and Germany, Britain, and France. Hope that is clearer:)
It’s Colorado cuz it’s on top of Oklahoma
C. Goods produced in one region could be sent to another and sold.