The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Alexander Hamilton's letter to John Jay (March 14, 1779) both confirm and complicate our understanding of Alexander Hamilton as he is portrayed in the musical in that in the letter we can read that Alexander Hamilton was against slavery. Hamilton was a severe critic of slavery in the United States and favored abolitionism. In that letter that Hamilton wrote to his close New Yorker friend John Jay, he supported the recruiting of black slaves to enroll in the Continental Army, an idea proposed by a South Carolina's colonists, Colonel John Laurens.
It is jousting. You could look it up, its probably quicker.
According to this text, there are several things that an Aymara Indian from Bolivia who moves from the countryside to the city does in order to engage in "Racial Passing" and avoid being categorized as "Indian." For example, changing their hair by perming it is one of these actions. An Aymaran Indian might also abandon the use of traditional clothing, such as ponchos and rubber soles sandals. Finally, he might also give up his culture by rejecting the use of the Aymara language.
By supporting "free unions," young feminists demonstrated that that males and females could stay and love each other in mutual passion.
The phrase “free union” was used in the later part of nineteenth
century to explain a relation which does not have any legal or religious bounds
attached, all parties can establish and leave the bond freely.