The correct answer would be C.
Answer:
A democracy
Explanation:
John Locke was one of the most influential thinker during the age of enlighten. He strongly believed that the power within the government should fall to the hands of the people, not the officials. All people within the country should be treated equally under the law regardless of their wealth or societal status.
He even became an inspiration by the founding fathers of United States when they're drafting the articles of indepnecned and the constitution, which was probably why our country is run on a democratic system.
For the first one its gross national income not sure for the other ones but hope I helped somewhat, and goodluck!
<u>Question 1</u>
The correct answer is: "they created a sense of inferiority that was inherently".
With the enactment of the Reconstruction Amendments to the US Constitution, that granted equality of rights to all US citizens without discrimination in terms of race, some Southern states started to issue laws that indirectly tried to circumvent such provision and to prevent African Americans from having actual access to their constitutional rights.
For example, Jim Crow laws aimed to impede black citizens from voting, by establishing requirements such as having a certain income level or obtaining a certain grade in a literacy test. Such requirements excluded mostly black citizens, which were treated as inferior and actually they were positioned as such, when being excluded.
<u>Question 2</u>
The correct answer is: "housing patterns and economic opportunity
"
Segregation is not allowed on any legal document or official action in the United States. It was declared unconstitutional and forbidden some decades ago.
But the US is a country deeply affected by social and income inequalities. The main reason is the difference in social and economic opportunities that a person can have access to, and thesedepend drastically on the type of neighbourhood or community in which a person is born or lives.
Uprising of farmers and distillers in western Pennsylvania in protest of a whiskey tax enacted by the federal government.