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snow_lady [41]
3 years ago
6

Please help me its due by tomorrow!

Social Studies
1 answer:
Vilka [71]3 years ago
4 0
Ask the questions in here not in the photo I might be able to help
You might be interested in
What kinds of things does someone have to see to lose innocence?
SIZIF [17.4K]

Answer:

sex or acts of extreme violence, but this depends on your country's laws on innocence and your particular's area's view on innocence and how it is lost. I assume your country applies to the western view of innocence. If so, the answer given should suffice

Explanation:

Seeing sexual intercourse at a young age is seen in western cultures as loosing innocence, because you are introduced to the acts of pleasure (or reproduction) from an age that you are not expected to do so. Sex in itself can be weaponized and used to hold power over someone and take away theirs.

It is also thought that seeing acts of extreme violence also make you loose said innocence, because you are introduced to grotesque ways of behaving that could influence how you interact with the world in respect of empathy and your actions.

3 0
3 years ago
How is a border error made in 1818 significant to people today?
IgorLugansk [536]

Answer:

For years, the state of Georgia has been in desperate need of water. Droughts and water rationing today are commonplace, and Georgia may have a legitimate claim to a section of real estate in Tennessee that would give the state partial rights to the waters of the Tennessee River. That will be for the attorneys to hammer out and for Congress to ultimately decide. But what I find even more thought-provoking is what would happen to the potentially hundreds of thousands of Tennessee residents who would wake up one morning to find they are now Georgians, without having moved one inch.

Back in 1796, the common border of Tennessee and Georgia was determined by the United States Congress. It was to be drawn along the 35th parallel of north latitude. In 1818, two surveyors were charged with mapping this out: one from Tennessee and the other from Georgia. Due to human error, antiquated equipment, or just haphazard surveying of the treacherous terrain, the border was actually mapped one mile south of where it was intended. In 1826, James Camack, a Georgia mathematician who was one of the original surveyors, admitted the error. Three attempts were made to move the border, but none succeeded. That one-mile error may seem insignificant after nearly 190 years of relative acceptance on both sides, but it has now become very significant and critical to the state of Georgia in general, and to the City of Atlanta in particular.

Atlanta is one of the few cities on the continent that’s not built on a water source capable of sustaining it. One of the region’s main reservoirs, Lake Lanier, now stands at 15 feet below normal levels. Given the urban sprawl of the city, the commodity of water has become very precious. Today that one-mile difference would provide the state of Georgia with ownership rights to a small portion of the Tennessee River, and the water so badly needed. Tennessee officials call the move absurd, even musing about dusting off the muskets, but to Georgia legislators it is desperately serious, and they will go to court to correct the error.

So: What if this seemingly far-fetched border shift actually does come to pass? How would the affected Tennesseans’ lives change? Of course there would be the normal nuisances like new phone numbers, drivers’ licenses, and insurance cards. New power and phone companies with which to deal. Forming new allegiances to the Falcons rather than the Titans. (OK, well, that part will never happen!)

But the data suggests that the day-to-day lives of these new Georgians would change for the worse. First, the value of their homes would drop. The median home price in Tennessee is $163,000. In Georgia, it is

$150,000. Further, as Travis H. Brown points out in How Money Walks, they would be pushed from a state with no state income tax to one with a 6% tax; from a state with a state & local tax burden of 7.7% to one with 9%; and from a state with taxes per capita of $2,707 to one that levies an average of $3,222. And finally, on a scale from 1 to 50 (with 1 having the worst national tax burden) Tennessee is ranked nearly the lowest at # 48, to Georgia’s #33.

Clearly, this issue is not simply a story about the water. It is also about the potentially hundreds of thousands of people whose lives will be changed forever.

6 0
3 years ago
When a governor acts as head of his or her political party, he or she is fulfilling the role of quizlet
statuscvo [17]

When a governor acts as head of his or her political party, he or she is fulfilling the role of chief legislator.

Chief Parliament: The US Parliament should consider legislative changes proposed by the US President. The president can also veto a bill passed by parliament, but the president's veto can be overturned by a majority of members of both houses.

President Carter as Chief Congressman: Jimmy Carter proposed dozens of important laws during his tenure as President. Among the issues he raised were environmental protection, deregulation of some industries, and foreign policy. Here is an example of President Carter's law:

Panama Canal Treaty: President Carter is an important step in his goal of improving relations between the United States and Latin America in returning the Panama Canal to Panama. Was considered. Opponents, however, believed the United States should continue to control the canal, arguing that "we built the canal, paid for it, and it's ours."

Learn more about Chief legislator  here: brainly.com/question/4384

#SPJ4

4 0
2 years ago
one of the primary components of a fair and free election is the use of secret ballots what is a secret ballot
vodomira [7]
A voting system that allows voters to cast their vote in secret so that the voter isn't influenced by any other individual, and at the time of voting no one else knows who the voter chose
6 0
3 years ago
Younger adults are more likely to have more possible selves but less likely to believe they can attain them.
daser333 [38]

"Younger adults are more likely to have more possible selves but less likely to believe they can attain them." is false

This is further explained below.

<h3>What are adults?</h3>

Generally, An adult is a person who has reached complete maturity and development. A person is considered an adult once they reach the age at which they are held to be legally accountable for their conduct. The fact that he was now an adult was shown by the fact that he had become a parent. Children less than 14 years old are required to travel with an adult.

In conclusion, It is not true that younger persons are more likely to have a greater number of potential selves, but they are less likely to feel that they can achieve those selves.

Read more about Young adults

brainly.com/question/9440387

#SPJ1

5 0
2 years ago
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