Even US President Grant said that the Native American tribes were correct in resisting the "reservation system". He did, however, need to help expand US western growth. His orders to his generals in the West were to force Native Americans on to reservations. He believed this was a must in order to expand settlements and create farmlands and mines. Grant had no choice despite his ideas to avoid conflicts.
Bacon's rebellion was justified. He thought that the government was not protecting him and everyone else from the Powhatan's and also indentured servants were not getting the land they were promised in their contract as a servant for someone for a certain amount of years.
The Colonists felt that they were justified in refusing to obey certain British laws and officials. With the Stamp act, they were being taxed without having any say in the government that was taxing them. They also did not need the British soldiers telling them what to do, because they felt they were no longer British citizens.
The internment of Japanese Americans on the West Coast during World War II refers to the forced relocation and confinement of around 120,000 individuals, two-thirds of whom were U.S. citizens, following the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. The U.S. government justified this action by citing national security concerns, fueled by wartime hysteria and racial prejudice. Many of those interned lost their homes, businesses, and personal property, and the internment is now widely recognized as a violation of civil liberties and a grave injustice. In later years, the U.S. government formally apologized and provided reparations to survivors.
The US justified the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II primarily through national security concerns, claiming that individuals of Japanese descent posed a potential threat of espionage or sabotage following the attack on Pearl Harbor. Government officials argued that the internment was necessary to protect the country from possible subversion. This rationale was further supported by wartime hysteria and racial prejudice, leading to a widespread acceptance of the policy despite the lack of evidence for any actual disloyalty among Japanese Americans.
The southern political thinker who justified southern resistance to the tariff of 1828 was?
indictment
The "White Eyes" were never justified in seizing the Creeks' Land or any Indian Nation Property and in fact, the United States broke over 900 Treaties with Native Americans, and treated them like animals for the most part, emasculating, and humiliating them. One terrible thing the Soldiers did was to round up all the Indians and force them onto "Reservations." This was a free roaming people, and a number of them simply sat down, and died because of it. Many starved, or died from exposure. There were Indian Agents who were corrupt and stole food and supplies that were intended for Native Americans in Reservations. Even today, the Native Americans on those Reservations, are still struggling to over come the events of the past.
100%
indictment; BRITISH
by being great
of course it was justified! The Egyptian people were mistreated and exploited by an insanley corrupt government.
to win freedom from great britain
It justified the reasons for changing government.
No, they were not concentration camps as the Germans built. They were Detention camps to keep the Japanese-American people under observation.
Its all relative on how you would consider justification. The 19th century Americans had the idea of Manifest Destiny, like it was there "Destiny" to expand westward and take over most of the continent. But, as you probably know, there were already people living there (natives.) The Native Americans were already pushed westward and put on reservations to try to "civilize" them. But once again, it is all relative.
The government justified the forced relocation of Native Americans primarily through the belief in Manifest Destiny, which held that Americans were destined to expand across the continent. Officials argued that relocating Native Americans to designated territories would allow for the development of agriculture and settlement by white settlers, which they claimed was essential for economic progress. Additionally, they often framed the removal as a way to protect Native Americans from conflict with settlers, despite the devastating impacts it had on indigenous populations.
Jefferson lists 27 different reasons that justify the American Revolution in the Declaration of Independence. After all, you cannot start a revolution because "you want to."