They didn't want to be involved in any (foreign) wars that didn't have anything to do with the United States.
Hopefully this has helped!
Agriculture has played a major role in Arkansas’s culture from territorial times, when farmers made up more than ninety percent of the population, through the present (about forty-five percent of the state’s residents were still classified as rural in 2006). Beginning as a region populated by small, self-sufficient landowners, the state evolved through a plantation culture before the Civil War, to an era when tenant farming and sharecropping dominated from the Civil War to World War II, before yielding to technology and commercial enterprise. For more than 150 years, agricultural practices had hardly changed. Hand tools and draft animals limited an average farmer to cultivating about four acres a day and made it difficult to accumulate wealth. But World War II transformed agriculture, and in twenty-five years, machines turned what had been a lifestyle into a capitalistic endeavor.
They wore shorter hemlines and more “promiscuous” styles for the standard of fashion during the victorian era. hemlines to the knee instead of at the ankle were considered taboo. these women had short hair in sleek Bobs. they were Gobby costume jewelry. all of this was seen as nontraditional, and therefore were seen as rebellious for the Victorian era