Answer: hello :)
The <em>legislative branch</em> makes laws, but the President in the executive branch can veto those laws with a Presidential Veto.
The <em>Judicial branch </em>can declare those laws unconstitutional.
The <em>executive branch</em>, has responsibility for day-to-day enforcement and administration of Federal laws.
Explanation:
<u>Congress has the power to create laws, the President has the power to veto them, and the Supreme Court may declare laws unconstitutional. Congress consists of two houses: the Senate and the House of Representatives, and can override a Presidential veto with a 2/3 vote in both houses.</u>
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~<u>rere</u>
Answer: Rome pursued an imperialist policy.
Explanation:
War conquests pursued this policy. Rome had the most organized and most disciplined army in the ancient period. The beginning of the territorial expansion of Rome is connected with the Punic wars with Carthage. Rome also had the highest quality navy of its time, which further contributed to expanding the empire. Many conquered peoples had to pay taxes to Rome, which filled the state budget and enabled the financing of military stones. At the same time, Rome was a slave-owning society, and it had a free labor force that worked on various jobs, and what in that context contributed to the spread of Rome was the infrastructure.
Rome had the best infrastructure in antiquity, which contributed to Roman troops' easier mobilization and movement. Throughout its history, Rome has had several imposing military leaders and politicians who contributed to the spread of Rome in its ranks. Caesar is certainly the greatest of them, but it is necessary to mention Pompey, Octavian, Diocletian, and many others.
Answer:
The 40th term of (255, 250, 245...) is 60.
Explanation:
so here we minus 5 from 255 to get to 250 and we do it again to get to 245. for reaching the 40th term we should do it 39 times.
so, 255+ (-5) (39) = 255-195 = 60
which is our 40th term.
Keeping it brief, the Court -- little by little -- gradually asserted that certain rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights are, in some way, "in" the 14th too; that the 14th protects those rights from being violated by the states. But the Court never said that all of the rights in the Bill of Rights are "in" the 14th. Over the course of many decades the Court kept on expanding the list of which rights in the BoR are "in" the 14th, but all along the way the Court kept on saying too, that not all of the rights are "in." By the 1960's *most* of the rights in the BoR were "absorbed" into the 14th.
All Christians, but no one else were the group allowed to practice their religion beliefs freely in Maryland.