Think of a policy as a plan. We will do B if A happens. The best example I can think of is the policy that the United States does not negotiate with terrorists. That is a policy, but it has been broken, for example, when POW were traded from Guantanimo Bay for US soldiers taken hostage.
<span>A law is legally binding. For example, the President of the United States can veto bills. That isn't a policy. The President doesn't have a guideline that he can veto bills and Congress can't say we will break that "policy" this time. That is the law so they must allow it. </span>
<span>In short, </span>policies<span> are </span>not<span> legally binding. They are "plans". </span>
<span>Laws </span><span>are </span><span>legally binding. They are final and concrete, for the purposes of this discussion.</span>
Answer:
Samuel de Champlain is appropriately called the “Father of New France because he nurtured the colonization of Canada through its failures, setbacks and successes. The French plans to colonize North America, in 1603, differed from the common practiced policies of colonization.
Explanation:
Answer:
verb (used with object), rat·i·fied, rat·i·fy·ing. to confirm by expressing consent, approval, or formal sanction: to ratify a constitutional amendment. to confirm (something done or arranged by an agent or by representatives) by such action.
It is quite mew, like 100-200 yrs. new. However, nowadays people are able to create these types of societies based on where they live, what they and others like, and others need to sustain themselves.