Under the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, when assessing whether a governmental action has infringed on an individual's rights, the court must balance both, but ultimately grant the government the ability to do whatever it deems necessary.
Explanation:
The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures. No warrants shall be issued without the reasonable cause.
It upholds the security of the individuals against the subjective invasion by the government and its officials. Privacy protection is ensured. The government must take step in a balanced manner so that the privacy rights are not crossed and the security of the individual is ensured.
Answer:
Lay investiture.
Explanation:
There are no better terms to explain investiture as the main word is. This is explained to be the act of putting a cleric, layman or a bishop possession over the said unit or group that is been assigned to him. This in most cases is seen to be done by religious or non religious folks. In the context above, it is discussed that the king took it solely to himself to invest clerics which according to research was seen to cause a controversy between religious and non religious group at that tine and era.
The theme was to trust others, not be afraid, and live life to the fullest. It is mostly inspirational.
Republican government is the type of government that the
Romans had. The people voted most of their leaders and government officials,
and those individuals selected the rest. They contributed to democratic
principles by making rules/laws/decrees that gave people the accountability to
vote, keep an eye on laws, do panel duty, designate senators, pay taxes, have
the judges discipline all people the same way, and permit people in the
government to have the same power and to refuse others' concepts.
I don't remember a lot, but it's mostly about people surviving the big dust storm and a family's struggle to survive in it, mostly.
Glad I could help, and good luck!