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Gekata [30.6K]
2 years ago
14

1. According to the Constitution, how many people represent each state in the Senate?

History
1 answer:
dangina [55]2 years ago
7 0

Answer:

1. The senate has 100 people, 2 from each of the 50 states.

2. The number of representatives from each state is determined by its population. Each state must have at least 1 representative in the house.

3. US citizen 21 years and older

4. The state legislature.

5. Members of an electoral college

6. Governments of Free states were required to help recapture runaway slaves who had escaped.

7. Slaves count as 3/5 of a person when counting population for representation.

Explanation:

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Please discuss the Japanese internment and the balance between civil rights and national security
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Born from the wartime hysteria of World War II, the internment of Japanese Americans is considered by many to be one of the biggest civil rights violations in American history. Americans of Japanese ancestry, regardless of citizenship, were forced from their homes and into relocation centers known as internment camps. The fear that arose after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor created severe anti-Japanese prejudice, which evolved into the widespread belief that Japanese people in America were a threat to national security. On February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, giving the government the power to begin relocation.

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This order of internment was met with resistance. There were Japanese Americans who refused to move, allowing themselves to be tried and imprisoned with the goal of overturning Executive Order 9066 in court. The Japanese American Internment Camp Materials Collection(link is external) showcases the trials of Gordon Hirabayashi and Minoru Yasui, two men who had violated the relocation order. In the case of Japanese-American Gordon Hirabayashi, an entire defense committee was created to garner funding and defend him in court. The case made it all the way to the Supreme Court, where the President's orders were declared constitutional and Hirabayashi was pronounced guilty. Minoru Yasui v. The United States met the same fate, with the justification that Yasui had renounced his rights as a citizen when he disobeyed the orders of the state. 

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