I THINK it is answer choice A. Marbury V. Madison was about judicial review. Gideon V. Wainwright was about providing an attorney for the defendant who were unable to afford their own attorney. And please he versus Ferguson was about the separate but equal doctrine. So answer choice A is the only one that makes sense.
Answer:
It depends, if the one that does hard labor had a chance to get educated then yes, it is fair. If he never got the chance to get an education, then no. Why? Because if he did get the chance to get educated and didn't, then he basically chose to do hard labor. If he never got the chance to get educated, then that is unfair because his brother did have the chance.
Honestly idk if that helped, but that's how I see it.
One of the most pressing aspects of Kennedy’s New Frontier program was the elimination of poverty, which meant expanding the social safety net, which many conservatives were opposed to.