The Trail of Tears
Forcing to agreeing
Forcing
Back then we forced. Well, we did a lot of forcing,
forcing people to obey so you could get what you want. What I know is the reason we did it a lot. Greed.
Forced
You just got kicked out of your home for not a single thing you did, but for something someone wants. So now you're walking with your family to find a new home out in the middle of no where. That's almost exactly what happen to the five tribes that walked The Trail of Tears.
Agreeing
Now that we have a little less greed in our lives we agree more often than just plain-old-forcing each other to do this, do that. We have more care in what we do, and to me that means agreeing is easier.
Similarities
Forcing and agreeing have only one similarity, and that similarity might be hard to find. But the similarity is you still do the thing that person forced or agreed to. For an example, if two people were agreeing to go on a walk you would do it, and if you were forced to go on a walk you would still do it.
The Trail of Tears
There's a trail that goes from Georgia and through Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, Missouri, Arkansa, and to Oklahoma. That trail is named The Trail of Tears. Five Native American tribes walked that trail all because mean-old-mister president Andrew Jackson wanted all the gold that was on their land all to himself.