Answer: She worked as "a big-city prosecutor, a corporate litigator, a trial judge and an appellate judge."
Explanation:
The detail that supports the idea that Sonia’s career gave her a chance to experience and understand several different elements of the American legal system is that "She worked as "a big-city prosecutor, a corporate litigator, a trial judge and an appellate judge".
Sonia was born in New York where she was an assistant district attorney. She also practiced privately and was nominated to the District Court by President Bush and later nominated to the Supreme Court by Obama.
She understood the American legal system as she was very experienced.
The primary goal of the Constitution as stated in the Preamble is: (A) to give the country uphold liberty.
The last part of the Preamble reads, "...and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Prosperity..."
The detail "...make sure they are not touching each other..." best supports the inference that one bad apple can spoil all the others. As stated in the text, the fruits are stored in the hoard house for future consumption. It is important that one does not contain a bruise since this will also affect the others around it.
The bandwagon fallacy is in the insistence that good cities are good because they have rail.
Explanation:
The bandwagon fallacy is where the causation of something is confused as an effect.<u> It is the argument that because all the great cities of the country have light rail, our city too should have the same light rail system to be as good as them.</u>
This argument falls apart because the rail will not curb the problems that the passage itself talks about and then willfully ignores. I<u>n fact, bringing the rail to town will actually aggravate some of the issues mentioned here</u>. Which is why the argument becomes more weak.