The abolitionists opposed further westward expansion because they thought that it would lead to more and more slave states.
Answer:
Hello There. ☆~°|---__€○€__---|°~☆ The answer to this is...Gorbachev's reforms reversed totalitarian policies that had rewarded silence and discouraged individuals from acting on their own. Glasnost encouraged a free flow of ideas and information and allowed public criticism of government economic policies. Perestroika gave local farm and factory managers greater authority and allowed individuals to own small private businesses. Democratization loosened the Communist Party's control on society and politics. Citizens turned to other reformers who promised faster and even greater changes. Communist hard-liners tried to undo Gorbachev's reforms, but their August coup resulted in the collapse of the Communist Party. Nationalist groups that had been demanding self-rule now declared independence.
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The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although you did not attach options for this question, we can say the following.
The United States blamed Great Britain when the Shawnee tribe attacked General Harrison and his troop because the federal US government thought that the English supported Tecumseh, who was the leader of the Shawnee, decide not to sign the Treaty of Fort Wayne of 1809.
This caused much conflict between the Shawnee and the white Americans. On November 7, 1811, in the so-called Battle of Tippecanoe, the troops sent by Governor William Henry Harrison(he was the governor of the Indian Territory) were attacked by surprise by the Native Indians. However, the troops -about 1000 soldiers- bravely resisted and defeated the Shawnee in the battleground of Prophetstown, next to the Tippecanoe River.
El Greco was disdained by the immediate generations after his death because his work was opposed in many respects to the principles of the early baroque style which came to the fore near the beginning of the 17th century and soon supplanted the last surviving traits of the 16th-century Mannerism.[1] The painter was deemed incomprehensible and had no important followers[4] Only his son and a few unknown painters produced weak copies of El Greco's works. Later 17th- and early 18th-century Spanish commentators praised his skill but criticized his anti-naturalistic style and his complex iconography. Some of these commentators, such as Antonio Palomino and Céan Bermúdez described his mature work as "contemptible", "ridiculous" and "worthy of scorn".[5] The views of Palomino and Bermúdez were frequently repeated in Spanish historiography, adorned with terms such as "strange", "queer", "original", "eccentric" and "odd".[6] The phrase "sunk in eccentricity", often encountered in such texts, in time became his "madness".
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Not a hunded but I think it is Adams Smith's