They attacked flight crews.
It really depends on which state you live in. Some state it is easy to amend their constitutions while with others the process is difficult.
To change the US Constitution you need a 2/3rds majority from Congress. I believe with state constitutions you have to have a petition with a certain number of signatures, which is hard to do, then the signatures must be checked to make sure they are authentic meaning the people who have signed the petition are from the state and they actually exist. Then it goes to the State, which they will look at the petition and I believe the State gives it to lawyers too look at and then a Judge must also look at it. If the judge disagrees, the process must start all over again.
Hopefully this helped and good luck.
Mass production of printed material. Before the press, each page of a Bible, for example, could take all day to write. After the press it would take a few days to carve the stamp, but then you could print 50 copies of the page in a very short time.
<span>A primary document is something written by a participant or contemporary observer. For example you could look at documents, accounts of battles, memoirs of soldiers/politicians, a newspaper article from the era etc.
A secondary source would be someone writing about the Civil War after the event not having participated or witnessed anything.
</span><span>This was delivered in March 1865 just after he was sworn in - it recaps the reasons why the Union went to war and recommends finishing the job off (the CW had a few weeks still to run at that point, although most people by then knew it was a matter of time, exactly when was still in doubt). It also follows up on the Gettysburg Address of November 1863 where Lincoln recast the CW as a fight to free the slaves and bring about the original concept outlined by the Founding Fathers of freedom and equality.
</span>
i cant give you a link becuz brainly blocks it. Sorry, but i would if i could!
Answer:
Alexander the Great Impact on Society
Explanation:
More importantly, Alexander's conquests spread Greek culture, also known as Hellenism, across his empire. In fact, Alexander's reign marked the beginning of a new era known as the Hellenistic Age because of the powerful influence that Greek culture had on other people