Answer:
<h3>Edgewood IDS v. Kirby.</h3>
Explanation:
The Edgewood IDS v. Kirby was a monumental case concerning on the issue of proper and equal allocation of public school finance. The case was filed on May 23, 1984 at the Travis County by the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund against William Kirby, commissioner of education.
The case was filed against the unequal and discriminatory funding of Edgewood Independent School District, San Antonio and other poor district public schools. The plaintiffs claimed that the defendant used unfair means in public school funding.
After numerous hearings, the court finally declared an unanimous decision in favor of the plaintiffs. As a result, Texas supreme court declared that the Texas constitution required that each school district be funded at approximately the same level.
Certain unalienable rights mean certain right can never be taken away.
Option D
<h3><u>
Explanation:</u></h3>
Unalienable rights are the rights that are given to a person as a birthright. These rights cannot be denied by any means nor can the individual give them up by choice.
In the drafts of The Declaration of Independence, many drafts mention passages about how the 'Creator' has given undeniable rights to all individuals. One such right as mentioned in the drafts is 'the liberty to life and enjoying it'. The passage further explains that these rights cannot be given up by us nor denied to us as they are a part of us. They help in defining the person that we become through the course of our life.
Answer:
Michael Isaac Blanks is Billy Blanks' nephew
Explanation:
The appropriate response is Totalitarian. It a political framework in which the state perceives no restrictions to its power and endeavors to manage each part of open and private life wherever doable.
A totalitarian administration endeavors to control for all intents and purposes all parts of the social life, including the economy, instruction, workmanship, science, private life, and ethics of nationals. "The authoritatively broadcasted philosophy enters into the most profound spans of societal structure and the totalitarian government looks to totally control the contemplations and activities of its nationals."
As early as the 1640s Swedish boat builders fabricated several small craft on the Delaware River in their short-lived New Sweden colony, but large-scale shipbuilding started when William Penn (1644-1718)<span> settled his great proprietary grant of Pennsylvania between 1681-1682 with skilled Quaker artisans and maritime merchants escaping the religious persecution (sufferings) in old Britain and seeking economic opportunity in the New World. In fact, six years before he founded Philadelphia, Penn had helped shipwright </span>James West (d. 1701)<span> develop a small shipyard in 1676 along the Delaware Riverfront in what later became Vine Street in the city of Philadelphia. Meanwhile, Penn recruited Welsh, Irish, Scot and English Quaker craftsmen who were involved in shipbuilding in Bristol, England, and more fully along the Thames River, already by 1682 a great center of ship construction and merchant houses. Indeed the Southwark section of London’s Thames riverfront soon gave rise to the Southwark shipbuilding and merchant community along the Delaware riverfront of Philadelphia. When the Philadelphia riverfront became too crowded with merchant docks and buildings for establishment of shipyards, many shipwrights moved a few miles upriver to the Kensington neighborhood that soon rivaled Southwark as a shipbuilding center on the Delaware River.</span>