Answer:
Bryan very much idealized the individual American, particularly the farmer, as prime example of democracy, like Jefferson, and less elegantly, Jackson. All three were equally skeptical of the concept of masses of urban industrial workers, though for different reasons.
McKinley, coming from the Republicans, then the party of distinguished patrician interest and privilege, was much more quick to see small scale movements like the Populists as rabble rousing, relying instead upon the wise leadership of the well bred. in the same way, Hamilton actively disliked "the people' thinking them lazy, feckless and ignorant. He did not believe democracy need be all inclusive.
do you have answer choices?
In the southern colonies, Loyalism flourished among the wealthy elite of English heritage, but most backcountry settlers were slow to become involved in the controversy over imperial taxation. Most were yeoman farmers who were not rich and not English—they were of German, Scottish, or Scots-Irish heritage—and they were non-Anglican "dissenter" Protestants. Most significantly, they valued their isolation in the western hills and would fight to protect their liberty as independent frontiersmen. Yet as war became imminent, decisions were forced upon them. Pressured from both sides—by the wealthy Loyalists in their midst and the coastal Patriots who arrived to recruit them—backcountry men proved stubbornly resistant to recruiting, sermonizing, and fear mongering, as we see in the reports of determined but frustrated Patriot recruiters in the South Carolina backcountry.
A, D, and, E is my guess, I may be wrong.
The freedoms you are talking about are the Bill of Rights, which are the first 10 amendments in the United States Constitution, and guarantee citizens freedom and freedom from the government. The Bill of Rights was not in the original Constitution because the Federalists believed it was not necessary to have them. In 1791, the Bill of Rights was finally added to the United States Constitution, after the pushing of the Anti-Federalists to add it in. The Anti-Federalists, along with other citizens and groups, worked for the Bill of Rights to be added into the U.S. Constitution because they wanted to protect the freedoms of the citizens from the central government. They were scared the central government would abuse their power, like Great Britain did when they abused their laws and used "taxation without representation."