Yes I think they can, if they are trying to agree on moral matters in "Public Policy" I don't see why religion would have to play a part in the discussion
A fleet of warships called is called also naval fleet
Shay's Rebellion. The public was angry they could not have an official money (such as a bank note or Specie). They also assaulted tax collectors and Congress could not summon a force in time.
The English common law originated in the early Middle Ages in the King’s Court (Curia Regis), a single royal court set up for most of the country at Westminster, near London. Like many other early legal systems, it did not originally consist of substantive rights but rather of procedural remedies. The working out of these remedies has, over time, produced the modern system in which rights are seen as primary over procedure. Until the late 19th century, English common law continued to be developed primarily by judges rather than legislators.
<span>the correct response would be that the historian is using "research skills", since he must find out the exact order of events. </span>