<span>On the issue of state sovereignty, the text states that since around 1992, the supreme court has started considering and restoring the view that federal actions do not always have to be accepted by the states and that some forms of the federal actions can be resisted by the states (it was a right not a privilege).
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Answer:
1. There was only one branch of government: To avoid the federal level from becoming too powerful, such as Britain, the United States created one government branch which was the Legislative branch (Congress). They gave the rest of the power to the states.
2. America fell more in debt due to the articles: Even with one federal branch, it was basically powerless. Congress couldn't collect taxes, regulate prices, regulate trade, or stop states from printing money. Due to this, America and it's people fell more in debt and caused a lot of conflict.
3. America faced many foreign threats: Since Congress couldn't raise an army, they couldn't deal with foreign powers. These threats included British soldiers still occupying American forts, Indians raided settlements, Spain closed the Mississippi River to American trade, and Pirates in the Caribbean kept stealing American ships.
During the Vietnam War, the United States supported the South Government.
In spite of the U.S. economic and military aid, South Vietnamese government and the Army of the Republic of Vietnam did not demonstrate that they were capable of handling the Viet Cong (National Liberation Front).
Jefferson's performance as President justified divergent conceptions of executive power. Known for his hostility to strong central government and the judicial overreach of the Supreme Court under John Marshall, Jefferson nonetheless jettisoned strict construction when the nation's vital interests were threatened.