Democratic-Republican Societies were locally-organized political agrupations that arose in the US territory during 1793-94 aiming to promote and work towards democracy and republicanism and to extinguish aristocratic ideas.
The first society was established in 1793: the Germans of Philadelpia. More than 35 new ones flourished until 1975. Many of their leaders ended up becoming part of Jefferson's Democratic-Republican Party, that he founded at a national level.
The societies claimed for equal justice and knowledge diffusion. But the main and ultimate goal was to "<em>support and perpetuate the EQUAL RIGHTS OF MAN</em>" as, for instance, the society in NY explicitly stated. These rights included freedom of speech, opinion, press, assembly which in turn granted the right to express opinions regarding the job done by government representatives, to demand explanations about public policies and acts, the right to translate those opinion into written format and to spread them by using the press.
A national level is everywhere but a state level is in your specific state
Answer:
September 1919
Explanation:
Frustrated, some workers who had galvanised by strikes in other industries quit their union. Finally after the referendum, the unions agreed to strike in September 1919. On September 22, the strike began. Half the steel industry ground to a halt, and workers in six states walked off the job.
Answer:
The second one: America sen troops
Explanation:
America chose to stay neutral
They didn't want to fight
It was looked down upon because it reminded many of the colonial times being ruled by a foreign power