Well it kinda depends on where you gear your essay to.. few tips:
don't start with a question
if you want start with a fact
make it interesting (catching/hook)
Answer:
D
Explanation:
I'm not no expert but that would be the only logical answer
Answer:
Debra Medina claimed that nullification was possible by state laws that could neutralize federal laws. She based her claim on the 10th Amendment, which establishes that any power not constitutionally granted to the federal government can be held by the states.
Explanation:
The Constitution doesn´t enable the nullification of federal laws by the states, and several academics have stated that it could be illegal since the Supremacy Clause pronounces federal laws as the supreme national law. So nullification would overthrow the constitutional interpretation held for 200 years.
Let us also remember that Gov. Rick Perry, who supported nullification, had already skipped the nullification issue by starting a debate about secession. This debate is a reminder of the time when state rejection of racial integration had to be stopped by the Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka.
Answer: <span>Adolescent egocentrism.
</span>Adolescent egocentrism describes the inability that adolescents have to distinguish between their perception of what others think about them and
what people really think about them. L<span>awrence had the perception that the teacher doesn't like him but that may not be true.</span>