Answer:
Not applicable
Explanation:
We don't have enough information to judge this case
Answer:
The decision in Brown v. Board of Education was the Supreme Court of the United States of America's decision that brought an end to racial segregation in the US school in 1964. Before the judicial pronouncement in the Brown v Board of Education case, the Jim Crow Laws which held sway in the Southern States of the United States of America upheld racial segregation and discrimination against the Black Americans. The Jim Crow Laws were upheld by the decision in Plessy v. Ferguson. The Jim Crow laws supported by the US Supreme Court decision in Plessy's case posited that the Black American was not to share public facilities like restaurants, restrooms, schools, public buses and trains with the White American. The decision which established the principle of "separate but equal", promoted segregation against the Black Americans, and the Black code was further enforced against the Black Americans. Blacks were not allowed to attend schools attended by Whites. The plaintiff in the Brown v. Board of Education case instituted the action against the US Board of Education on the ground that the racial school segregation advanced by the decision in Plessy's case was a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution at that time. This is because the provision of separate facilities is inherently unequal. However, the decision brought liberation to the black race.
Answer:
upper New York state and southeastern canada
Explanation:
The Iroquois (Haudenosaunee; “People of the Longhouse”) Confederacy of upper New York state and southeastern Canada is often characterized as one of the world's oldest participatory democracies.
The answer is b. I had this and it was b.
<span>yes. They have staff that actually read the bills and give them a general synopsis of their content. It depends a lot on the speed at which a bill is written and brought to a vote. Like the final bill for the stimulus for example. It was so huge (about a thousand pages) and contained so many things in it, that it could not be read in the short span of time from presentation to the vote. This is one thing that I think should be changed. No emergency passage stuff. It is unfair to us and to our representatives both.</span>