He was the first president from the West.
He was the first president who came from the working class.
He had a more limited education than previous presidents.
Because of his direct campaigning, he had more support among “common men” than previous presidents.
He disliked the power of the “Eastern aristocracy.”
Well, they both are to blame that's a fact. Although I do tilt slightly more to the fact that the Britains were the ones who should take the most blame. The British made the colonists land at that time attempted.
<span>The answer is "adopting". It is an excerpt from the book of Andrea Sofroniou, "Therapeutic Psychology". It tackles Adolescence, a Psychosocial Stage by Erik Erikson, where an individual (aged 12-19 years), encounters conflict between his identity and feelings of confusion.
"If the adolescent fails to resolve the identity crisis by the time of entry into adulthood, he will feel a sense of role confusion or identity diffusion. Others seem to avoid the crisis altogether and settle easily on an available, socially approved identity. Still others resolve their crises by adopting an available but socially disapproved ideology. This latter option is called negative identity formation and is often associated with delinquent behavior. Resolution of the adolescent identity crisis has a profound influence on development during later adulthood."</span>
George Washington was the one chosen to lead the continental army