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Dbq Antebellum Politics Essay

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Words 896
Pages 4
Robert Still
Dr. Bowman
U.S. to 1877
03/10/17
Module 7 In the hustle and bustle of everyday life during the 1830’s, the time was full of enormous parades that were bedazzled with portraits of political leaders. It can only be inferred that the whole purpose of it was to help promote that leaders image and get the people to recognize it more so that if the time presented itself the people would vote or lean towards that leader’s perspectives and or campaign. I think that siding with Mary P. Ryan’s Antebellum Politics as Raucous Democracy would be most beneficial because it is the one essay that sounds mostly what is our democracy is like today.
The idea of a democracy is where a system of government is ran by the whole population or all the …show more content…
In Document 5 President Andrew Jackson Vetoes the Bank Bill. “It is to be regretted that the rich and powerful too often bend the acts of government to their selfish purposes” (Richardson, 271). In this document, Jackson argued in his veto that the bank’s charter was unfair, because it gave the bank considerable, almost monopolistic, market power, specifically in the markets that moved financial resources around the country and into and out of other nations. With such power the bank’s profits and its stock price skyrocketed through the market powers. He then suggested that it would be fairer to most Americans to create a wholly government-owned bank instead, or at least to auction the Second Bank of the US’s monopoly privileges to the highest bidder.
So in conclusion although some of what Andrew Jackson wanted to do involving the electoral college isn’t what is done today. Still many people feel like it should be a thing and that’s what I believe that Ryan’s essay is about. Keeping a government, a democracy but doing it so in a very loud rather than on the down low, to gain attention and make people think that there is an alternative to how the society can

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