Explanation:
increased the mobility of labour (and the Chartists) virtually destroyed canal transport, but stimulated some road building as feeders for railways. allowed for the faster dissemination of ideas and for the growth of national newspapers. stimulated political life.it becomes easy for people to good transport goods from one place to another and travel from one country to the other one place to the other
Answer:
It was ant-Indian and anti-aristocrat at the same time
Explanation:
The 1676 Bacon's rebellion was aimed at protesting at the Aristocratic rule which prevented people from seizing Indian lands.
" Bacon's Rebellion, fought from 1676 to 1677, began with a local dispute with the Doeg Indians on the Potomac River. Chased north by Virginia militiamen, who also attacked the otherwise uninvolved Susquehannocks, the Indians began raiding the Virginia frontier. The governor, Sir William Berkeley, persuaded the General Assembly to adopt a plan that isolated the Susquehannocks while bringing in Indian allies on Virginia's side.
Others saw in the Susquehannock War an opportunity for a general Indian war that would yield Indian slaves and lands, and would give vent to popular anti-Indian sentiment. They found a leader in Nathaniel Bacon, a recent arrival to Virginia and a member of the governor's Council.
Bacon demanded a commission to fight the Indians; when none was forthcoming, he led "volunteers" against some of Virginia's closest Indian allies. This led to a civil war pitting Bacon's followers against Berkeley loyalists. The conflict was often bitter and personal—at one point, Berkeley bared his chest and dared Bacon to kill him—and involved the looting of both rebel and loyalist properties.
Berkeley expelled Bacon from the Council, reinstated him, and then expelled him a second time. After the governor fled Jamestown for the Eastern Shore, he returned, only to be chased away by Bacon's army, which burned the capital.
It would be The Grange, it was during a time when consumer demand of many farm goods dropped
Answer:
Gains of Globalisation for Rich at the Cost of Poor:
Source of Repeated Economic Crises:
Globalisation as an Imposed Decision of the Rich:
Unequal Distribution of Benefits:
Strengthened Role of MNCs:
Private Profits at the Cost of Social Security:
Increased Protectionism and Neo-colonialism: