Answer: C. That it robbed people of their individualality.
Explanation: just took test.
The Americans started to look more down on the Indians because of their primitive ways and just the basic fact that they were different than the colonists. back then they usually didn't have a valid reason to hate them but found any excuse to do so.<span />
By the time that the United States entered World War II in December of 1941, Americans had no question about who to blame for it. World War II had been caused by Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany and Emperor Hirohito's Japan, with Mussolini's Italy aiding and abetting the campaign against freedom. However, these opinions weren't always as firmly held. When the war first began in 1939, not all Americans agreed on where to lay the blame.
Congressional Republicans were in a festive mood on January 24, 1804, as they gathered at Stelle's Hotel on Capitol Hill for a banquet celebrating the transfer of the Louisiana Territory to the United States. The festivities began at noon with the discharge of "three pieces of cannon." President Thomas Jefferson and Vice President Aaron Burr were among the honored guests; they departed after the banquet, but the revelry continued until nightfall. "A number of the guests drank so many toasts that in the night they returned to their houses without their hats," one contemporary reported. But when one celebrant offered a toast to Vice President Burr, the effect was pronounced and chilling: "few cheered him," the chronicler observed, "& many declined drinking it."
You can find that information here:
http://www.let.rug.nl/usa/documents/1826-1850/the-confessions-of-nat-turner/list-of-persons-murdered.....
"<span>Joseph Travers and wife and three children, Mrs. Elizabeth Turner, Hartwell Prebles, Sarah Newsome, Mrs. P. Reese and son William, Trajan Doyle, Henry Bryant and wife and child, and wife's mother, Mrs. Catherine Whitehead, son Richard and four daughters and grandchild, Salathiel Francis, Nathaniel Francis' overseer and two children, John T. Barrow, George Vaughan, Mrs. Levi Waller and ten children, William Williams, wife and two boys, Mrs. Caswell Worrell and child, Mrs. Rebecca Vaughan, Ann Eliza Vaughan, and son Arthur, Mrs. John K. Williams and child, Mrs. Jacob Williams and three children, <span>and Edwin Drury"
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Roughly 55 people were killed.