<h3>2
. the supreme law of the United States</h3>
In our country, anything decrees written within our United States documents such as the Constitution stand supreme over state laws or other state level decrees. Therefore federal law is the supreme law of the land.
<h3>
3. implied</h3>
N/A
<h3>
4. popular sovereignty </h3>
According to the philosophy of "popular sovereignty", the term itself states that it's the consent of the people to control their government [as the bottom line]. With this in mind, Sandra is exercises her popular sovereignty by choosing who she wants her officials to be, hence the ownership in her own decision.
<h3>
5. State Government</h3>
Certain individuals favor giving the national government more power but foresee potential power-hungry acts to come out of this. Most people to this day still agree that state governments should take more of a role in the central government.
<h3>
6. Implied</h3>
Our government needed flexibility in creating their own powers to execute organized and substantial actions for our country- implied powers DO NOT appear on the constitution, so notice in the name itself elastic, meaning stretch, or even "necessary and proper" which could mean what is NEEDED for something to happen.
<h3>
7. The Constitution is the document which outlines the plan of government of the United States including three branches of government and a system of federalism.
</h3>
The other options are far-fetched and invalid. The constitution outlines our government with how it should operate.
<h3>
8. Checks and Balances</h3>
In the situation where one branch, in this case executive (since its the president), makes a veto that is unfair or merely bias, the other branches can balance this out and overrule it for the better of its people. No branch shall be more powerful than another!
Answer:
communications inventions
transportation inventions
names of specific inventors or entrepreneurs
examples of consumer goods
the impact of inventions on American society
Explanation:
The evidence found in the Declaration of Independence: "That
whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the
Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government,”
<span>The concept of natural rights and the notion of
the social contract were supreme in the thinking of the colonists when they dared
the right of Europe to control their economic and political lives. It's a
contract, meaning it can be cancelled by the people when they believe the
government is hindering their unalienable rights.
</span>
Answer:
Thanks!
Explanation:
oday, it may seem impossible to imagine the U.S. government without its two leading political parties, Democrats and Republicans. But in 1787, when delegates to the Constitutional Convention gathered in Philadelphia to hash out the foundations of their new government, they entirely omitted political parties from the new nation’s founding document.
This was no accident. The framers of the new Constitution desperately wanted to avoid the divisions that had ripped England apart in the bloody civil wars of the 17th century. Many of them saw parties—or “factions,” as they called them—as corrupt relics of the monarchical British system that they wanted to discard in favor of a truly democratic government.
“It was not that they didn’t think of parties,” says Willard Sterne Randall, professor emeritus of history at Champlain College and biographer of six of the Founding Fathers. “Just the idea of a party brought back bitter memories to some of them.”