Answer:
ok so the first one is the supremacy clause (that's not all of article 6, it says more about states rights). it means that any laws on the national level trump the ones on the state level.
the second one is the 10th amendment, which says that states can do whatever isn't prohibited by the constitution (and other amendments), not just what is specifically said they can do.
this basically shows the power balance between the national government and states government. the national government is always supreme over state governments, but state governments still do stuff. that's what federalism is.
The first answer seems to be the most likely answer
The answer is
The Constitution delegates certain powers to the national government but reserves other powers for the states.
Pls thank me
The settlement house movement<span> began in Britain in 1884 when middle-class London reformers established Toynbee Hall, the first </span>settlement house<span>, in East London to provide social services and education to the poor workers who lived there.</span>
In england religious change came as a result of a political disagreement between the pope and the king.