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valkas [14]
3 years ago
7

What action or actions gave american women the right to vote?

History
2 answers:
Kobotan [32]3 years ago
6 0
Hi there!

I recently conducted research on Lucy Stone, who was a women's suffragist supporter who helped gain voting right for women.
In order to promote the idea that women should be allowed to vote, Stone formed parades and marches, created protests, wrote books, and gave speeches. Many also made daring and brave actions, such as refusing for others to do something for women just because they didn't have the right to.

Hope this helps!
Kitty [74]3 years ago
5 0

A constitutional amendment (APEX Class ;)

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In a general election, each state has officials who count and<br> votes.
erma4kov [3.2K]
Oh now i get it.
Well the answer should be in a general election, each state has officials who count and CERTIFY votes.

The officials have to make sure that the people who give their vote have the credibility and rights to voice their vote, to avoid any sort of Election fraud that may negatively effect one candidate.
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<span>Wealthy merchants hope this helps</span>
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Sphinxa [80]

Answer: 1. FRA’s RD&T mission is to ensure the safe, efficient, and reliable movement of people and goods by rail through basic and applied research, and development of innovations and solutions. Safety is DOT’s primary strategic goal and thus, the principal driver of FRA’s RD&T program. FRA’s RD&T program also contributes to other DOT strategic goals because safety-focused projects typically yield solutions toward state of good repair, economic competitiveness, and environmental sustainability goals. The RD&T program also has an important role to play in workforce development.

FRA’s RD&T program is founded on an understanding of safety risks in the industry. Hazard identification and risk analysis allows us to identify opportunities to reduce the likelihood of accidents and incidents, and to limit the consequences of hazardous events should they occur. Key strategies include stakeholder engagement and partnerships with other researchers such as the Association of American Railroads, prioritization of projects, and conducting research through cost-effective procurement.

1.Most large corporations today are beginning to invest aggressively in artificial intelligence (AI), the applications of which range from self-driving cars to virtual personal assistants, but governments have yet to jump on the bandwagon. In the public sphere as well as in policy circles, there has been much talk about the impact of AI on society (for example, what the future of work will look like), but there has been very little effort devoted to understanding how AI could transform government itself.

History is, however, replete with examples of new technologies or methodologies having fundamentally affected how government operates. Advances in technology can not only enhance or streamline administrative tasks and service delivery, they can also change the role of government or entirelyreorganise its core functions.

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