Question

rewrite this: 1."Manifest Destiny" is the 19th-century doctrine or belief that it was the divine right and inevitable fate of the United States to expand its territory across the North American continent
2. The United States went to war with Mexico for multiple reasons: the annexation of Texas, disputes over the southern border (with the U.S. claiming the Rio Grande as the boundary), and the desire to acquire additional Mexican territory such as California and New Mexico. The belief in manifest destiny fueled ambitions for expansion, which made conflict with Mexico seem both justified and inevitable
3.President Polk justifies the declaration of war by asserting that Mexico has invaded American territory and instigated conflict, framing it as a matter of national honor, duty, and patriotism.
4. American motives for waging the war included the desire for territorial expansion to fulfill the belief in manifest destiny, the acquisition of valuable lands, and spreading American institutions and culture.
5.Opponents of the war, including figures like Henry David Thoreau, argued against it on moral grounds, asserting that it was an unjust war driven by slavery interests and the quest for power.
6. The Mexican War had significant political consequences, including heightened tensions between the North and South over the expansion of slavery into new territories, which contributed to the sectional crisis leading up to the Civil War.

Answers

Answered by GPT-4o mini
1. "Manifest Destiny" refers to the 19th-century belief that it was both a divine right and an inevitable fate for the United States to expand its territory across the North American continent.
2. The United States entered into war with Mexico for several reasons, including the annexation of Texas, disputes regarding the southern border (with the U.S. asserting that the Rio Grande was the boundary), and the desire to acquire additional territory, such as California and New Mexico. This belief in manifest destiny fueled expansionist ambitions, making conflict with Mexico appear both justified and unavoidable.
3. President Polk justified the declaration of war by claiming that Mexico had invaded American soil and provoked conflict, presenting it as a matter of national honor, duty, and patriotism.
4. American motivations for engaging in the war included the desire for territorial expansion to realize the belief in manifest destiny, the acquisition of valuable lands, and the goal of spreading American institutions and culture.
5. Critics of the war, including individuals like Henry David Thoreau, opposed it on moral grounds, arguing that it was an unjust war motivated by interests in slavery and the pursuit of power.
6. The Mexican War had significant political ramifications, including increased tensions between the North and South over the extension of slavery into new territories, which contributed to the sectional crisis leading to the Civil War.
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