It greatly angered the Abolitionists - remembering that most Northerners were not Abolitionists by any means.
True
It drove the two sides further apart. The Supreme Court declared that slavery was legal in every state of the Union. This delighted the South as much as it angered the Abolitionists.
inside of an egg, only 7 crocodiles are eating
It claimed that slavery was legal in every state of the Union, if the Constitution was interpreted in a certain way. This delighted the South, as much as it angered Northern Abolitionists, and raised the temperature of the whole slavery debate nationwide.
It greatly angered the Abolitionists - remembering that most Northerners were not Abolitionists by any means.
ghuon
Because the decision showed that the Supreme Court didn't think that any State could outlaw slavery.
Because the North was angered by the war.
Because it declared that slavery was legal in every state of the Union.
TRUE
Because the Declaration of Independence said that every man in America was free.
True
True
Harry Truman was angered when MacArthur demanded an unconditional surrender from North Korea during the Korean War. Harry Truman fired MacArthur after a congressman received a letter from MacArthur stating this idea. MacArthur knew that this would be a way to prolong the war in Korea.
Fillmore angered the abolitionists and other anti-slavery groups in the North, by the Fugitive Slave Act, which was part of the Compromise of 1850. This compromise was engineered by Henry Clay. It was opposed by Fillmore's predecessor, Taylor.
Yes, the elderly Taney was Chief Justice, and he had framed those words about the status of black people that so angered the Abolitionists.