Cause they felt like it
Some Americans, called loyalists, still felt faithful to Britain and did not want to split from them.
Because it was destined to increase and support the establishment of slave states and to upset the delicate balance of power established in the Compromise of 1850. It opened a new discourse on slavery that could only be resolved by Civil War.
Some had been born in the United States and considered it home.
because they can
Some members of Congress felt that President Polk's declaration of war on Mexico had been spurred by American tactics that were too aggressive. Some felt that the war's real goal was to acquire more slave territory.
to oppose the federalists.
to oppose the federalists
Some Americans, called loyalists, still felt faithful to Britain and did not want to split from them.
It was thought to be unconstitutional
They felt it simply wasn't their war to get into because the war was in Europe
Some of the reasons for the founding of the NAACP were:The desire to oppose racismAfrican Americans' desire for more opportunitiesJim Crow lawsSegregation laws
Some had been born in the United States and considered it home.
It isn't that the people oppose it is more of the family. For most Asian they/the family members who came to America had to be well educated. Some Asians view African Americans as uneducated and they believe they would just live off of the Asian. But there are some people who oppose and those people just haven't gotten past the fact the racism yet.
Some labor unions opposed immigration because their members believed immigrants would take jobs away from native-born americans.
God knows. Idk, maybe cuz the British weren't happy cuz they were forced to do stuff that they didn't want
Some of the reasons for the founding of the NAACP were:The desire to oppose racismAfrican Americans' desire for more opportunitiesJim Crow lawsSegregation laws
Because it was destined to increase and support the establishment of slave states and to upset the delicate balance of power established in the Compromise of 1850. It opened a new discourse on slavery that could only be resolved by Civil War.