<em>A. Draw the nation into unnecessary conflicts.</em>
Explanation:
In 1920, the United States Senate rejected the Treaty of Versailles, the peace treaty that ended World War I and created the League of Nations, due to fears that the League of Nations would draw the nation into unnecessary conflicts.
President Woodrow Wilson was the one who thought of the League of Nations, which was talked about in his Fourteen Points. His Fourteen Points were plans for during and after World War I and mostly had to do with peace and preventing future conflicts. The League of Nations ended up being part of the Treaty of Versailles, but even though United States President Woodrow Wilson came up with the League of Nations, the United States never ended up joining it.
This was because many people were isolationists after World War I. Isolationists did not want anything to do with foreign affairs, as they feared it would draw the nation into unnecessary conflicts. Many people did not want a repeat of World War I and essentially wanted to protect their country. The United States Senate was also filled with isolationists and wanted nothing to do with foreign problems, so they simply did not want to join the League of Nations.
<span>In September 1814, an impressive American naval victory on Lake Champlain forced invading British forces back into Canada and led to the conclusion of peace negotiations in Ghent, Belgium. Although the peace agreement was signed on December 24, word did not reach the British forces assailing the Gulf coast in time to halt a major attack.On January 8, 1815, the British marched against New Orleans, hoping that by capturing the city they could separate Louisiana from the rest of the United States. Pirate Jean Lafitte, however, had warned the Americans of the attack, and the arriving British found militiamen under General Andrew Jackson strongly entrenched at the Rodriquez Canal. In two separate assaults, the 7,500 British soldiers under Sir Edward Pakenham were unable to penetrate the U.S. defenses, and Jackson’s 4,500 troops, many of them expert marksmen from Kentucky and Tennessee, decimated the British lines. In half an hour, the British had retreated, General Pakenham was dead, and nearly 2,000 of his men were killed, wounded, or missing. U.S. forces suffered only eight killed and 13 wounded.Although the battle had no bearing on the outcome of the war, Jackson’s overwhelming victory elevated national pride, which had suffered a number of setbacks during the War of 1812. The Battle of New Orleans was also the last armed engagement between the United States and Britain.
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They were found in Florida. Thats why they are called "<span>The Seminoles of Florida"</span>
No English monarch could ignore Parliament is the correct answer on edgenuity, just took the test.