Correct answer:
<h2>Limited government</h2>
The 10th Amendment puts limits on the powers of the federal government. It reserves powers for the states (and for the people themselves) any powers not specifically designated to the federal government in the United States Constitution. Any laws and powers exercised by the states still must be in accord with what is stated in the US Constitution, however.
For some historical context, we might also consider that the original framers of the US Constitution thoughts that statements such as the 10th Amendment -- and all of the first 10 Amendments, known as the Bill of Rights -- were already inherent in the Constitution as it was written. They had composed a constitution that intentionally placed limits on the federal government. So, stating such a limit in an amendment seemed like a repetition of what was already apparent in the Constitution itself. As noted by the National Constitution Center, "The Constitution’s Framers thought that a bill of rights was appropriate for an unlimited government, but not for a limited one like the national government created by the Constitution. The Constitution accordingly sought to secure liberty through enumerations of powers to the government rather than through enumerations of rights to the people."
Nevertheless, to assure those who wanted the rights of the people specifically listed and protected, Amendments 1 through 10 were added to the Constitution as a Bill of Rights to affirm those protections.
Answer:
Multiple musicians use improvisation at the same time.
Explanation:
Hot jazz can also be called Dixieland, and it can also be called traditional jazz. It is a subgenre of Jazz, but its differential is the constant improvisation of all musicians and singers, who can even improvise simultaneously, giving a bohemian tone, freedom, fun and diversity to music, different from New Orleans Jazz that it presented a fixed musical structure, where all the musicians followed melodies and compositions strictly established for each one of them.
All courts, except the US Supreme Court, are established by Congress.
Generally speaking, during the Industrial Revolution, the workers that supplied labor in factories and mines were known as the "urban working class", since most of the factory work was done in or around city centers.