The answer is double jeopardy!
No, I believe that multiple weaknesses in the Articles of Confederation would have hurt America in time. One of the biggest problems was the lack of detail and specific attributes that the Constitution brings from long discussion and debates over what is best for the country. America needed to strengthen it's central government if it wanted to get anywhere, so we may not have become so powerful if we left the majority of the power in the state's hands. Another lacking component was the fact that we had no Executive branch to enforce Congress' laws and no National court to determine the meaning of the laws. Another example is the making of one currency for the entire country. These examples and more could have hurt America if they wouldn't have written the Constitution.
Answer:
1. There was a reduction of students in the school.
2. There seem to be "white flight". White students left the school
3. There was an abolishing of the school committee and replacement with a new one answerable to the Mayor.
Explanation:
Boston, an African-American community experienced school busing plans in the 1970s. This school busing required African-Americans students to be sent to white schools and white students to be sent to African-American schools. This was in the bid to achieve racial balance.
There was protest over this plan. This led to the Boston busing crisis. The school and city of Boston was impacted by the crisis.
D. The Kansas-Nebraska Act states that slaves were only allowed in the states below a certain point. And that the number of slave states and free states must remain equal.
Answer:
John Locke and Charles Montesquieu
Explanation:
There's John Locke, Charles Montesquieu, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, but I guess you can use the first two.