His main problem was with the Bank of the United States and their way of acting as though part of the government. He thought it wrong for a single bank to hold majority of the country’s gold and have a stable hold on their paper money. Therefore his passion for revenge came into play; the original charter was to expire in 1836 and needed a renewal to continue on. You can bet what Jackson decided to do. After gliding through Congress he gave the bank a big old veto, causing them to fold in 1836. Not only did he hate what he deemed a “moneyed monster” (American Pageant 268), he wanted to bury it forever by taking out all the federal funds from the vaults of this bank -- effectively bleeding them dry. Andrew Jackson’s spite is disgusting. He was willing to put the country in a massive financial panic just to prove his point and his power. Again, in no situation should this man have been put in charge with his impulsiveness being so obvious. Jackson left the country in shambles when he retired just for a revenge plot -- no matter how justified he thought he was, that is not acceptable behavior for a leader of a …show more content…
Jackson was raised in the south, a culture known for brutal slave owning. His southern roots also led to a southern outlook, which even today has a reputation for being closed minded. Andrew Jackson is the reason we have a definition for racism. His acts that were passed and his actions to have things passed are despicable in the eyes of most everyone. A prime example of his racism before he even became president goes back to the battle for Florida Territory. This fight was against the Seminole Indians and fugitive slaves they were holding, and fight he did. He killed leaders and chiefs with no ceremony, punishing them just for being a part of the land he so desired for his beloved country. His unnecessary brutality went essentially unpunished in the government -- which in itself is awful, but not the point. During his presidency, remembering the lack of reprimand, Jackson penned the Indian Removal Act to send the Cherokee people off the land of their fathers into the land of no one’s fathers -- far off and disconnected from the aggravated citizens of Georgia. Only when the Act was repealed in the Supreme Court and the judge declared it immoral and wrong did president Jackson have the audacity to overrule it. In claiming to have a desire to protect the “much injured race” (American Pageant 267), he ended up showing a major bias. He essentially told the whole country he valued the white citizens of