The Truman administration wants to implement the universal military training in preparation for a defense attack against the communists. It trains American males for combat and military services. However, Wallace wants the opposite of Truman's actions, he desires of a peaceful foreign policy to lessen death tolls and taxes.
Answer:
Labor
Explanation:
A. Well labor needed to be changed, in the New World (colonial times) labor wasn't in favor for the colonists but, slaves and indentured servants were. Mostly slaves had it bad, indentured servants were there to work for you for a couple of years to pay of their debt and a free ride to the new world. America only wanted a way to keep people as their workers to build, cook, and farm for them. So they came up with slaves. Slaves were African people who were forced to work for their owners till they die.
B. To make "changes" Britain kept coming up with acts to set up the colonists.
C. Although their making only started wars and fights. So they weren't that successful.
D. Today we pay people to do their work but the people who did the work would not be kept. They'd still have their rights as humans.
(Hopefully this helped!!! <3 )
Answer:
The correct answer is C. The Hartford Convention proposed to end the War of 1812 by adding a set of amendments to the Constitution.
Explanation:
The Hartford Convention was a meeting held in Hartford, Connecticut, by delegates from several New England states in December 1814 and January 1815. It was to protest the War of 1812 between the United States and Great Britain. Shocked by the trade restrictions that harm the region's economy, New England federalist politicians used the convention to challenge what they perceived as the favoritism of the federal government to the south and the overall decline in state rights.
Members of the Hartford Convention have agreed on a number of amendments to the Constitution to remedy these wrongs. The cause was compromised when the War of 1812 ended at about the same time as the convention was in progress. In the wave of patriotism that followed the successful outcome of the war, the delegates were labeled as traitors and secessionists by the general public.