The escalation of the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal led to distrust among the public of the American government. Up until the 1960's and 1970's, Americans were typically approving of the government. They patriotically followed President Roosevelt into World War II and praised the government for helping them out of the Great Depression. The government played it relatively safe in the '50's and Americans didn't mind because they were experiencing great prosperity and didn't want to get involved in another major war. By the time the '60's and '70's rolled around, the Vietnam War was a source of contention because people didn't really agree with the war and the government began hiding information and lying to the public to maintain what little support they still had. The real hit came when Nixon became implicated in the Watergate scandal causing the public to mistrust the government even more. Both of these events demonstrated to the American public that the great leaders of America aren't as great as they're played up to be.
The boundaries would change which would end up in Israels favor. The territory that the Arab controlled was reduced. The territory was increased after the British rule. Future conflicts would be war in terms of territory and expansion.
The Electoral College is a body of people representing the states of the US, who formally cast votes for the election of the President and Vice President. How it works is citizens cast their ballots for president in the popular vote, they elect a state of electors. Electors then cast their ballot on Election Day in each state. In nearly every state, the candidate who gets the most votes wins the “electoral votes” for the state, and gets that number of voters in the Electoral College. So, your answer is B, President.
Hope this helps :)
Explanation:
The average household on Mississippi's yeoman farmsteads contained 6.0 members, slightly above the statewide average of 5.8 and well above the steadily declining average for northern bourgeois families. A quarter of Mississippi's yeoman households contained at least 8 members, and many included upward of 10.