The land of the non free and chicken nuggets
<span>Like many colonists, Georgians were divided on the issues of the Revolutionary War. The colony was reluctant to join the revolution at first because Georgia was self-sufficient, had no objections to the Intolerable Acts. It was financially dependent on Great Britain and had a long, successful history of self-government.
I hope my answer helped you.</span>
Answer:
I think it's B I'm sorry if I'm wrong it's just I can't remember well from when I learned this
Left Panel
I don't know how to eliminate all the choices, but the answer for this question is E.
A is incorrect. Out of 10000 cases making an appeal to the Supreme court, only 80 are hear.
B: Sometimes a case is heard if only 1 justice wants to hear it because the case is in the realm of his specialty. So B is not true.
C: C is one of those possibilities that is possible that might be true. Actually the cases presented to the court go through a pool of clerks who decide whether or not to pass it on.
D: For the same reason that B is not the answer, I don't think this one is either. The court has in recent history had an odd number of justices. I don't think the chief justice has any more votes than any of the others. The vote rarely is 4 to 4 close, especially recently.
Middle Panel
The answer to this is D to make and pass laws that apply to the state. I'll explain this better in the comments when I'm at home.
Right Panel
I think the closest answer is A. I'll put this one in the comments as well.
NORTH:
Industrial economy based on manufacturing; support for tariffs—American goods could be sold at lower prices than could British goods
SOUTH
Agrarian economy based on agriculture; opposition to tariffs, which increased the cost of imported goods
WEST
Emerging economy; support for internal improvements and the sale of public lands
Regional differences had a major effect on Andrew Jackson’s presidency in the early 1800s.
One example is when the Congress passed the Tariff of Abominations. Vice President John C. Calhoun joined his fellow southerners in protest. Economic depression and previous tariffs had severely damaged the economy of his home state, South Carolina.
Calhoun used the Protest to advance the states’ rights doctrine. He argued that, because the states had formed the national government, state power should be greater than federal power. He believed states had the right to nullify, or reject, any federal law they judged to be unconstitutional.
Calhoun’s theory was controversial, and it drew some fierce challengers. Many of them were from the northern states that had benefited from increased tariffs.
These opponents believed that the American people, not the individual states, made up the Union. Conflict between the supporters and the opponents of nullification deepened. The dispute became known as the nullification crisis.