The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "Rebates to large companies!" The railroad practice did reformers call on governments to legislate in the late 1800s, with minimal success is that Rebates to large companies!
Read more on Brainly.com - brainly.com/question/1249314#readmore
Answer:
The Crusades were a series of religious wars initiated, supported, and sometimes directed by the Latin Church in the medieval period. The best known of these Crusades are those to the Holy Land in the period between 1095 and 1291 that were intended to recover Jerusalem and its surrounding area from Islamic rule.
As someone who was too young at the time to fully appreciate the complexities of the political process at the time, I never understood why the Equal Rights Amendment was never passed. On the one hand, it seems a no-brainer, a basic statement of obvious human rights. However, trying to research online the reasons why it wasn't passed produces a whole bunch of feminist fruitcakery, including some who insist the amendment technically passed and is in effect. The original support for the amendment was among conservative women, while labor unions and "New Deal" types virulently opposed it an exact flip flop of the typical cliches and stereotypes of the political left and right.
My idle speculation is that the trouble stems from the second clause of the amendment as proposed: "The Congress shall have the power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article." That seems, in an era when people are arguing the constitutionality of mandating health insurance coverage, a loophole big enough through which to ram all sorts of trouble.
Dividing political power between a central authority and other units, like the states in the United States, is the main concept of "federalism," since this allows for states to exercise a certain amount of autonomy while still allowing the federal government to control the most important issues facing the nation.
Paul Revere's engraving was used as propaganda ( something used to help or harm a cause or individual ) to demand the removal of British troops from Boston.