That would be satire(a). Hope it helps!
Answer:
In beginning of "The Schuyler Sisters," Aaron Burr tell about "there's nothing rich folks love more than going downtown and slummin' it with the poor." That's when the three Schuyler sisters are being shown walking downtown when Peggy says warnings like "<em>daddy said to be home by sundown" </em>and <em>"Daddy said not to go downtown.</em>" This shows that Peggy usually sticks to the rules. Eliza and Angelica push off the warnings and continue their walk while Peggy reluctantly follows.
The song continues by showing the girls' reactions to the war. Angelica sings <em>"But–look around, look around, the revolution's happening in New York!" </em>This shows that Angelica is not afraid. Peggy says, <em>"It's bad enough daddy wants to go to war," </em>and <em>"It's bad enough there'll be violence on our shore." </em>This portrays her as the 'innocent one.' Eliza says, <em>"People shouting in the square." </em>This portrays her as the 'observant one.' And Angelica focuses on, <em>"New ideas in the air." </em>This portrays her as the 'intelligent one.'
Soon after, Burr comes back and tries to flirt with Angelica. This reveals Burr to be the 'flirty' or 'humorous' one. She rejects by saying, <em>"I've been reading Common Sense by Thomas Paine. So men say that I'm intense or I'm insane. You want a revolution? I want a revelation." </em>Angelica, now accompanied by her sisters, sing, <em>"'We hold these truths to be self-evident. That all men are created equal' And when I meet Thomas Jefferson, I'm 'a compel him to include women in the sequel!" </em>This shows that all three sisters believe in women's rights, but Angelica is one that is more open about it, as she is the one who is focused on.
(I absolutely love Hamilton, by the way!)
The Stage Manager overlaps past and future when he describes the Gibbs:
"Doc Gibbs died in 1930." (future) Then he says: "Mrs. Gibbs died first--long time ago, in fact." (past).
The second example is when he talks about the cornerstone they're putting in the bank so that people "a thousand years from now" can find it. He discusses the ancient Babylonians and then the people of a thousand years from the present.
Answer: The correct answer is A.
The U.S. government signed the Second Treaty of Laramie and pushed Indians onto more remote reservations.
Explanation:
For much of the United States' period of westward expansion, white settlers' attempt to claim plots of land were met with fierce and sometimes violent resistance from indigenous peoples. This resistance intensified in the latter half of the 19th century as the US federal government repeatedly signed and violated treaties with various Plains tribal leaders. Most prominent among these were the Sioux Indians, of which the Lakota are a subgroup. The treaty of Fort Laramie in 1868 established the 60-million-acre Great Sioux Reservation and created agencies to represent the federal government among each tribe. So, the consequences therefore, if the Lakota stayed on the reservation and refrained from attacking white settlers, the Treaty of Lamarie will apply. Thank you.