Dude Where is the question
The <em>nullification crisis was a crisis between South and North America.</em> It happened during the presidency of Andrew Jackson and it consisted of the Ordinance of Nullification that made possible to the state of South Carolina to nullify federal laws that were passed by the United States Congress.
Henry Clay was a congressman and during that time he made the proposal for the Compromise of 1850. This compromise <em>was a package of laws</em> that were passed by the Congress, it <em>created New Mexico and Utah, admitted California as a free state, made Texas loose territory for New Mexico state, ended Washington DC slave trade and made easier to slave owners to recover slaves that ran away</em>. Basically, this Compromise tried to cool things down and actually delayed civil war.
#2:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nr6-5JH0FaHrSuPJDWccHaBeKrTJLh7ORYDRYVnulf8/edit
i hope the link works ;3
#3:
I think there will certainly be new amendments added to the bill of rights because their is never a limit to any laws that can be created, especially in our world, which is changing constantly. Ever since the bill of rights has been formed there have been many adaptations and changes made for every era the U.S has been in. You can never accurately predict what amendments would be made until they are in the process of being created. There have been amendments made on sexuality and possibly, in the future, made on immigration. I choose these because these are increasingly popular issues that are being reformed in the 21st century.
I hope that this helps you and i am working on the first one currently (hehehe) but yeah
Social contract theory, is nearly as old as philosophy itself, is the view that persons' moral and/or political obligations are dependent upon a contract or agreement among them to form the society in which they live.