Answer:
The Taco Liberty Bell was an April Fool's Day joke played by fast food restaurant chain Taco Bell. On April 1, 1996, Taco Bell took out a full-page advertisement in seven leading U.S. newspapers announcing that the company had purchased the Liberty Bell to "reduce the country's debt" and renamed it the "Taco Liberty Bell".
Explanation:
Answer:
B
Explanation:
That's an awful lot of points. You can get our attention with 10 or 15.
A: not true. That sounds like communism.
C: not true either. I know of no government that bases ownership on those who buy the products. If it happens, it is a very small percentage where the employees themselves buy the products they make and sell.
D: The government can own businesses. In Canada, our governments used to own oil companies and air lines and part ownership in other businesses (which makes us sound socialistic which we are).
The answer is B. Private companies own the factories that produce their products. Think companies like Ford and General Motors and Exxon to name just a very few. Most of the Dow 30 fall into this category. There are exceptions. Some of the Dow 30 are things like computer software. So they don't have factories as such.
Answer: False
Explanation: I'm not the expert on this, but I know that Caliphs are regarded as monarchs that are the <em>sucessors</em> to Muhammad, so one would assume he wouldn't have any sucessors while he was still alive.
The correct answer is Theodore Roosevelt
According to the constitution, there is a take care clause which states that the president should take due care when upholding laws and ensuring that laws are executed with care and faithfully to the constitution. Theodore Roosevelt took an expansive stance on this clause because he expanded the definition and interpreted it in a different way.