I miss class.
):
I don't like being sick.
Created as an assignment for my AP Language and English 3 class during Junior Year. Class Project-thing..WOOT WOOT. ((:
Total Pageviews
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Cherokee TOT Research
Depending on the family and how willing they were to leave, due to circumstances, research varies on how life was after the removal of Cherokees. The walk was hard, yes, but some looked at it as a fresh start away from bad memories.
Research Number IDK
The major differences between the 13th amendment and the Emancipation Proclamation were as follows:
1. The 13th Amendment freed all slaves, regardless of what state they were in, while the EP only freed those in certain states and of certain circumstances.
2. The EP was only brought out by Lincoln as a political approach for election and as a strategy for the war against the Confederate Army.
'Nuff said.
My source: APUSH
1. The 13th Amendment freed all slaves, regardless of what state they were in, while the EP only freed those in certain states and of certain circumstances.
2. The EP was only brought out by Lincoln as a political approach for election and as a strategy for the war against the Confederate Army.
'Nuff said.
My source: APUSH
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Research Twooo
A main principle of the traditional American philosophy is expressed in the phrase: fear of Government-over-Man.Americans of the period 1776-1787 firmly believed in the soundness of the accepted maxim that "government is like a fire: a dangerous servant and a fearful master;" that, to be useful, it must be strictly controlled for safety against its getting out of hand and doing great harm. Through the generations, the people have considered that this maxim expresses one of history's most profoundly important lessons for Free Man. This maxim is based upon the knowledge that, in last analysis, government is force and must be feared and controlled accordingly. The great fear in 1787-1788 of the new, central government under the proposed Constitution was evidenced by the fact that the State Ratifying Conventions proposed scores of amendments, designed chiefly to keep under more rigid control what they considered to be this potential monster of power so dangerous to their liberties: the central, or Federal, government.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)