Answer:
Explanation:
Thank you for including the cartoon. I doubt even G***gle could have dug it up.
To answer your question, you have to decide what or who the flying object is. I'm not totally sure whose face is on that flying being, but a good guess would be Jackson. In any event, the point of the cartoon is that the cartoonist does not think much of Jackson for initiating the spoils system.
He (the cartoonist) is depicting Jackson as the devil himself for introducing such a system and the people who partake of the spoils are being taken in by the very devil himself. Not only that, at the time, the Federal Government should not be introducing such give away programs. We in this day and age, don't agree. We think the government is acting in the best interest of people when they (the governments at all levels) help.
John Paul Jones refused to surrender his ship and George Rogers Clark led his troops through freezing swamps and surprised the British.
World War II was the deadliest military conflict in history in terms of total dead, with some 75 million people casualties including military and civilians, or around 3% of the world's population at the time. Many civilians died because of deliberate genocide, massacres, mass-bombings, disease, and starvation.
Answer:
Th grange
The alliance
The populists
Explanation:
The Grange, or Order of the Patrons of Husbandry (the latter official name of the national organization, while the former was the name of local chapters, including a supervisory National Grange at Washington), was a secret order founded in 1867 to advance the social needs and combat the economic backwardness of farm life.
The Farmers Alliance was an organized agrarian economic movement among American farmers that developed and flourished ca. 1875. The movement included several parallel but independent political organizations — the National Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union among the white farmers of the South, the National Farmers' Alliance among the white and black farmers of the Midwest and High Plains, where the Granger movement had been strong, and the Colored Farmers' National Alliance and Cooperative Union, consisting of the African American farmers of the south.
As an economic movement, the Alliance had a very limited and short term success. Cotton brokers who had previously negotiated with individual farmers for ten bales at a time now needed to strike deals with the Alliance men for 1,000 bale sales. This solidarity was usually short-lived, however, and could not withstand the retaliation from the commodities brokers and railroads, who responded by boycotting the Alliance and eventually broke the power of the movement. The Alliance had never fielded its own political candidates.