Answer:
Explanation:
Aristotle the legendary Greek philosopher said, “Man is by nature a social animal; an individual who is unsocial naturally and not accidentally is either beneath our notice or more than human. Society is something that precedes the individual.” Man cannot live alone
Answer: Jackson claims this act will benefit everyone — the country, the states, and both the white and Native populations — in some ways, such as wealth and prosperity.
Explanation:
However, these were just "empty words". Jackson's claims, like those that he is the greatest friend of the Indians, are just empty. Jackson's actions in practice are in total contradiction to what he claimed. The relocation act, which was voted in the 1930s, is primarily the intention of the seventh president. Jackson has historically been remembered as the biggest proponent of expelling Indians from their land. America was expanding industrially during this period, and in those circumstances, it needed all the resources and natural space. Jackson encouraged his people to expel Indians in every way possible; threats, killings, violent deportations are just some of the elements used. Jackson did nothing (and he could) when individual states passed unhuman laws affecting Indians. Thus the Indians could not vote and paid taxes, and their land could be sold to anyone at any time.
Most of this has to do with what is known "King Cotton" or the "Cotton Kingdom". Cotton was an extremely valuable product; it helped the North's manufacturing, it helped increase the North's capital from shipping the cotton to Europe, and it is estimated that 1/5 of jobs in Britain at the time were dependent on cotton. Back in the South, the invention of the cotton gin helped increase cotton output astronomically. Cotton picking and cleaning is an extremely timely and laboring process, and the need for cotton was still high, so slavery was the obvious answer. Slaves were also growing in population due to their own reproduction rate, perhaps the only time in history this has occurred. All of this had heavily tied slavery to the Southern economy on the eve of the Civil War.
The creator of the first national bank was Alexander Hamilton