Answer and Explanation:
Beginning in 1791 a series of treaties between the United States and the Cherokees living in Georgia gave recognition to the Cherokee as a nation with their own laws and customs. Nevertheless, treaties and agreements gradually whittled away at this land base, and in the late 1700s, some Cherokees sought refuge from white interference by moving to northwestern Arkansas between the White and Arkansas Rivers. Then in 1819, the Cherokee National Council notified the federal government that it would no longer cede land, thus hardening their resolve to remain on their homelands. In 1828, Georgia passed a law pronouncing all laws of the Cherokee Nation to be null and void after June 1, 1830, forcing the issue of states' rights with the federal government. At the same time President Andrew Jackson began to aggressively implement a broad policy of terminating Indian land titles and relocating the Indian population. In 1830 Congress passed the Indian Removal Act, which removed Native Americans west of the Mississippi River.
I think it might be D?
Answer: Here's all the land pieces I know
Louisiana Purchase: Sold by Napoleon to the US in 1803
Flordia: The Adam-Onis Treaty seceded Florida the US
CA, NV, UT, AZ: Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the Mexican-American war and these territories are called the Mexican cession.
Texas: (kinda complicated) Texas won its own independence and became the Lone Star state. Because of slave issues they did not admit Texas for a number of years. The Mexcian-American war did secure a lot of these lands
Oregon Territory: This land was previously co-ruled by Britsh and the US. They wanted this to end so they divided the land in half at the 49th parallel. President Polk tried to push for more land but was rejected.
Gadsden Purchase: Last purchase of land until Alaska or Hawaii. Bought from the Mexican government to build an easier railroad route (avoid tunning through the Rocky Mountains). This is a small portion of land below New Mexico.
Faction
group of people with the same interest
what is bad about a faction?
will try to get what they want even if it hurts others
"enlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm"
leads people to believe that they are not always controlled by the elites
what form of government does Madison want to create?
republic
what does a republic protect us from?
factions
why is the majority not always right?
the majority can be a faction
pure democracy
all power to the people to decide for everyone
two examples of a faction
democrat and republican
Answer:
What did you do on a typical day.
Explanation:You Wouldn't want to get right in the details of the war because he might not be willing to answer if you ask of the war first.
Give Brainliest Please
Hi!
Your answer is C.
A is an example because it's not good to only make identify one solution; you need backups or a variety of ways.
B is an example because, hey, not everything is true! Especially on the internet. Questioning source information is great because then you are sure what you are seeing is unbiased and accurate.
C is NOT an example. As stated above, you need a variety of solutions, but you can't just pick the first solution; you want to pick the <em>best</em> solution for the problem at hand.
D is an example. As stated above, questioning source information is great, but then you need to also verify it, because, like said before, not everything is true.