ANDREW JACKSON WEBQUEST- LETTER TO THE EDITOR
ANDREW JACKSON WEBQUEST- LETTER TO THE EDITORAndrew Jackson once stated, "I cannot be intimidated from doing that which my judgment and conscience tell me is right by any earthly power." This quote exemplifies President Andrew Jackson's beliefs that everything he does and thinks is correct and further emphasizes the fact that he was a selfish, tyrannical president. The decisions that Jackson made were for his own benefit and not for the benefit of the country, which is why I believe that Andrew Jackson should not be considered one of the top ten presidents of the United States. Immediately after Jackson's inauguration, he showed bad signs of leadership by using the Spoils System. This was the method of selecting political friends and supporters to be in your cabinet. Jackson specifically said in his first inaugural address that he would avoid such methods. In other words, he lied to the public about his way of picking his cabinet members. Congress members said that it "was vulnerable to incompetence and corruption." This means that they thought it was at risk of not being effective and being full of dishonesty and bribery. Luckily, the Pendleton Act ended this system in 1883.One of the negative decisions that he ma
Jackson had signed it mostly wanting to punish the Seminoles for harboring slaves when he invaded Spanish Florida. After the Indian tribes had walked "The Trail of Tears," where ¼ of them died from disease and lack of food, he decided to give them only $3 million dollars. Jackson stated, "I know what I am fit for. As president, he should be the exact opposite of this and put the thoughts of his country far above his own and should not be the selfish ruler that he acted as. After Jackson ruined the Second Bank, the Senate criticized him for his actions against it on March 27, 1834. " When he said this, he was directly disobeying his job in two ways. The removal of the Bank came solely upon Jackson's view of the Bank. Jackson did not obey this requirement in his decision. I can command a body of men in a rough way; but I am not fit to be President. Andrew Jackson once said, "John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it. de was the authorization and enforcement of the Indian Removal Act of 1830. Jackson's reasons to remove the Bank included his own bad experience with the national bank where he lost tons of money as a wealthy land entrepreneur. Jackson claimed in his veto letter to Congress that the Bank was unconstitutional, though it had previously been declared constitutional by Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, John Marshall. The Indian Removal Act was a United States Government policy that required the "Five Civilized Tribes" to move to Indian Territory from their native soil. The second irrational act of Andrew Jackson was the Bank War.
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