Answer:
In recent years, the filibuster has become a tactic regularly used by the minority party to block proposals of the majority party.
Explanation:
A filibuster is a very long debate that aims to prevent a proposal being passed, simply by preventing it from voting.
In 1957, Senator Strom Thurmond (at that time Democratic senator) set a length record with a speech of 24 hours and 18 minutes. He wanted to stop the proposed civil rights legislation. The proposal was nevertheless adopted.
The last time there was a proper filibuster in the Senate was in 1988, and was about election campaign funding. Democrat Majority Leader Robert Byrd demanded that everyone be present, which led, among other things, to Republican Bob Packwood being physically dragged into the Senate chamber by police officers. The filibuster lasted two days before the Democrats gave up. In the 2000s, 80% of major bills were stopped by "filibustering".
Legal term that accords the creator of a piece of music (or any other intellectual property) the right control its ude, reproduction, and performance.
Answer:
Huaso attire
Explanation:
The <em>huaso</em> attire is the traditional attire of the Chilean countryman and skilled horseman. The most distinguished feature of the attire is the straw hat called chupalla. They also wear a poncho over a short waist jacket and leather leggings over booties made from raw hide.
The Chilean rodeo is a traditional sport in Chile, a team consisting of two riders and two horses rides laps around an arena trying to catch a calf and pinning it against large cushions.
Answer:
A. Encryption
Explanation:
The <u>encryption</u> mechanism helps mitigate the malicious intermediary, insufficient authorization, and overlapping trust boundaries security threats, it also helps secure remote message exchanges between consumers by protecting the privacy of message data thus making it inaccessible by hackers.