The most common acts of terrorism in 1800s was against immigrants, blacks and non-Catholics. One of the biggest groups was the Klu Klux Klan aka the KKK.
The best event to show the destruction of the natural landscape after the west was settled was when the government allocated regions in the west for the American Indians. The Indians were given land to live on for life, these are called Indian reservations.
She earned the name bloody mary bc if she didnt think someone was doing things the right way ( her way ) then she would have there heard cut off
John Locke was an English philosopher who wrote <em>The Second Treatise of Civil Government</em> in 1690, after a tumultuous century in England. England had gone through many changes in the 1600s: monarchs beheaded, civil war, martial law, monarchs restored, and eventually foreign monarchs and the adoption of a bill of rights. All of this happened in only about 80 years! John Locke lived through these events, which profoundly influenced his political views.
John Locke's political views can be found in this book. He based his ideas on the concept of natural law, or a universal moral law that applies to all peoples and nations. Locke believed that a government was based on a contract between the ruler and his people. This contract was necessary to establish order (or everything would be chaos, like in England!). Locke believed that people have natural rights to life, liberty, and property (based on natural law) and the government is expected to protect these rights, which exist apart from any ruler. According to Locke, the people have the right to break this contract if the government fails to uphold their natural rights. This could be in the form of a rebellion, if necessary.
Locke's writings became widely read and were very influential in Europe and eventually the American colonies. If the words "life, liberty, and property" sound familiar, it is because John Locke's writings inspired Thomas Jefferson to pen the words "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" in the Declaration of Independence less than one hundred years later.