Defining the progress of the United States by definition means going to a more advanced stage or moving forward. One of the main questions they think when historians reviewed certain events and the events that formed the United States for a while is whether this particular event contributed to America's progress or not. In the 19th century, young Americans made major progress in mobility and trade. These advances in liquidity have enslaved people with commercial expansion of freedom.
The United States is defined by tolerance and opportunity. In that United States, the civil rights movement is a natural part of American progress, not contrary to the dark nature of the United States. In other words, the United States believes in promises of opportunity and equality even though it does not necessarily achieve it. But there is another story. In other words, white supremacist violence is not an exception, it is a rule. This story thinks that the United States is basically a white Christian country. This radical movement of racist speech and violence is basically seen in the two communities, Caucasian supremacists and Neo Nathi terrorists, and those they threaten.
For the most part of the 19th century, serious historians regarded the American Revolution as a grand story of idealism, nationalism, progress. This magnificent story explains the revolution as freedom as a struggle between contradiction, corruption, moral bankruptcy of modern power (America) and old world (UK). Needless to say, this view is unilateral. These early history belonged entirely to Whigg School. Historians see history, especially the American Revolution, as a journey of progress and progress. The Whig Party believes that human society is improving, moving towards political and social realization, and the United States is at the forefront of this progress.
In the early 20th century, the United States began a gradual reform. Business practices are immoral and political corruption is rampant. Progressives have enacted comprehensive laws to protect workforce, regulate industry, and limit corruption. Following the Great Depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt passed the Banking Act of 1933, which needed to oversee the financial system and protect consumers. An unprecedented government collected more taxes, implemented more regulations, and spent more on American citizens. New deal and state expenditure before World War II activated the country