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Jacksonian Democracy
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Jacksonian Democracy

In US history, a period in which belief in equal political, economic, social, and civil rights for all people became more popular, characterized by the presidencies of Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren 1829–1841. The new way of thinking encouraged Americans in general to play a greater role in the democratic process, and this grassroots movement opened the political process open to far more people.

Jackson symbolized the new attitudes of equality in a number of ways; he was the first president who was not a Virginian or an Adams, and he was a pioneer, an American Indian fighter, and a war hero.



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11) This tendency, which Brownson routinely connects with the rise of Jacksonianism, rejects the order and stability of organically developed societies in favor of human constructions, and is animated by hostility to the notion of authority, especially the authority of God--a principle that can be apprehended only by acknowledging the fundamental social significance of the Church.
Mead depicts Jacksonianism as warlike, trigger-happy, fundamentalist, nativist, paranoid, protectionist, suspicious of federal power, supportive of loose monetary policy, given to cowboy diplomacy, and committed to an anti-internationalist, unilateralist course in foreign affairs.
Democracy and capitalism were not inherently compatible; only as a consequence of the changes Jacksonianism provoked did there emerge a "middle-class mythology of democratic capitalism.
 
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