Jay M. Cahill here to save the day, lol.
Anyway lets get you the answer, "Regulating the Internet" would be an implied power in the Constitution, since it is something that the Founding Fathers couldn't possibly have seen, but is something that is in the best interest of the nation.
Good luck, and please give brainliest.
Needs to develop national Law
1. They did not have enough weapons
2. They did not have many soldiers
3. Their navy was extremely small
4. They were not as strong as Britain
By John Gregory | 8/16/16 8:30 AM
It has no classrooms or campus. It doesn’t offer degrees or diplomas. It doesn’t even have a football or basketball team.
Yet this uniquely American institution has touched the lives of every citizen for more than two centuries.
It’s the Electoral College, and this year, as it does every four years, it will select the person who will be the next President of the United States.
But how the Electoral College exactly works and why we even have it remains a mystery to many voters. To help answer those questions, Kentucky Tonight convened a panel of political and legal scholars to explain the history and mechanics of the Electoral College
During the colonial period of Arabs living in Kenya much economic, socio-cultural and political influences occurred. Islam was introduced to the region; commercial trade between the regions increased enormously (both export and import); the modest living of the Arabs developed a sensibility to trade in the early colonialist period forming more capital for investment; there was a relative amount of hostility due to the apolitical nature of the Yemeni Arabs in becoming involved with the Kenyan Politics; the intermarriage of Arabs and Kenyans resulted in the formation of the Swahili people forming the Bantu Language which resulted from heavy Arab influence.