Respuesta :
at one point the public would fear the army because with someone ruling over them (a dictator or king), if they didn’t listen to what there ruled said or talked something bad about the ruler they would be killed. so the public would fear them because they would kill the public for any reason they would.
Answer:
Americans feared the army as a threat to the liberty of the new republic.
Explanation:
Part of the difficulty in raising a large and permanent fighting force was that many Americans feared the army as a threat to the liberty of the new republic. The ideals of the Revolution suggested that the militia, made up of local patriotic volunteers, should be enough to win in a good case against a corrupt enemy. Beyond this idealistic opposition to the army, there were also more pragmatic difficulties. If a wartime army camped near private homes, they often seized food and personal property. Exacerbating the situation was Congress’s inability to pay, feed, and equip the army.