Answer:
you didn't provide paragraph six which is needed to answer the question
Both the Grangers and the Farmers' Alliance found it difficult to Stand together on national issues.
Option A
<u>Explanation</u>:
Farmer's alliance was an American agricultural movement of 1870s which sought to improve the farmer's economic conditions. Farmer's also formed an organisation, the northern alliance called the Granger movement.
Both the farmer's alliance and the Granger found it so tough to stand together on national issues. The Granger were known as the patrons of husbandry. This organisation was formed in 1867 to support better methods of agriculture. The main aim of both of them was to improve the working conditions and lives of the farmers. They both have very clear motives.
President Carter's attempts to free the hostages were done in good faith and effort, but were hampered by failures in communication, delivery and execution. The plan involved servicemen who were not as well-trained as they could have been and certain weather effects like the "haboob" which was a big dust cloud, doomed the mission. Carter does deserve credit for taking responsibility for the failure however.
Answer:
The historical development which illustrates the fulfillment of Winthrop's argument is:
(A) Polk negotiated a compromise with the British over Oregon.
Explanation:
Between 1859 and 1872, Great Britain and the US fought a bitter war for the control of Oregon. This war was caused by a stray pig; no wonder, the US termed it: "the Pig War." Earlier John Winthrop had argued that the United States, the New England, was to become "a city on a hill," very conspicuous to all men. Possession of the new land signaled an alliance with the word of God. Failure to uphold the human part of the covenant would expose the country to ridicule. President Polk, fighting the Pig War with Great Britain over Oregon without victory, was a sign of failure to uphold the covenant. The country was exposed to public ridicule because the war only ended with the signing of a treaty (a form of compromise), which ceded the whole of Vancouver to Britain and then Oregon to the US.