Near the end of World War ll, Congress passed the GI Bill which allowed returning soldiers to go to college and attain affordable home loans, among other things. So, when soldiers came back home they took advantage of this and bought homes in the up and coming suburbs that were home to the majority of the middle class. Also, people were just dying to spend their money on various new products and appliances after the penny pinching and rationing years of the Great Depression and World War ll.
The most accurate answer appears to be B, however I’m uncertain if they built their religious shrines/temples underground.
Both the Ninth and Tenth Amendments are designed to <u>LIMIT</u> the power of the federal government.
The Ninth Amendment (1791) contained a Bill of Rights to protect the individual's right and limit the central government, stating that the rights addressed weren't final and didn't deny or disparage the existence of other unenumerated rights, retained by the people.
As for the Tenth Amendment (1791), it granted the powers that the Constitution neither delegated to the federal government nor prohibited to the states, to the states, which basically meant that the states could establish their own laws as long as they weren't contrary to the federal government's laws.
The conflict between Andrew Jackson and john C. Calhoun "A. Was based entirely on personal difference" and The Democratic view of power was "that <span>government always endangers private rights" in the time leading up to and during the Civil War. </span>
Southerners in the Confederacy
Explanation: