<span>In the US constitution, the value that was most important was equality. The founding fathers faced oppression and a lack of representation from the British. Because of that they wanted equality, and from that "equal" representation, for their constituency. Equal in quotes in the previous statement is because not everyone had the same rights at the time. The rights and equality were meant for white, property owning males.</span>
Americans were astounded by an invention's capacity to carry messages across the nation in the 1830s. The development of the telegraph as a new technology enabled quick connectivity.
<h3>What development in 1838 allowed for the instantaneous transmission of communications across the country?</h3>
The Growth of the Telegraph. Samuel Morse, a professor at New York University (shown on the left), started working on his own telegraph system in 1832. He created Morse Code in 1835—a set of sounds that stood for certain alphabet letters—and by 1838, he had presented his idea to the American Congress.
<h3>Who was the telegraph's creator in 1832?</h3>
Samuel F.B. Morse created an electric telegraph between 1832 and 1835, and subsequently he and his buddy Alfred Vail created the Morse Code (1838). By arranging dots, dashes, and spaces, the latter is a system for depicting alphabetic characters, numerals, and punctuation marks.
Learn more about Samuel F.B. Morse: brainly.com/question/811424
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The War Powers Resolution works to limit the power of the executive branch (aka president) to declare war and send troops into different areas. The reasoning behind this was this mishandling of the Vietnam War by multiple presidents. During the Vietnam War the president had the ability to send troops without informing Congress. Due to this act, the President must give Congress a 48 hour heads up of any increase or stationing of American troops. Along with this, these forces can only stay in this specific area for a certain amount of time . The only way to get extend their stay in a country is a declaration of war, which must be passed by Congress,