Answer:
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is common in both cases.
Answer:
the main purpose of war is destruction....
Explanation:
<em>War serves to provide a definitive answer to a dispute. War may kill many people in a short time but a bad peace will kill more and worse destroy more lives. It is just a slower evil. Nations or elements in nations are experiments. Conflicting idealologies fight for supremacy and when that fight reaches a stalemate war is the only way to break it without decades of slow simmering conflict that often creates the most violent outbursts and is most typically associated with genocide. Hatreds boil for too long and what happens when they boil over is often the worst evils attributed to war. Ironically they are really the evils of a bad peace. A peace kept too long when a short violent episode could have resolved the matter and real peace developed.</em>
Answer:
Over a thousand years after Abraham, the Jews were living as slaves in Egypt. Their leader was a prophet called Moses. Moses led the Jews out of slavery in Egypt and led them to the Holy Land that God had promised them. The escape of the Jews from Egypt is remembered by Jews every year in the festival of Passov
Answer:C
Explanation:
The Fourteenth Amendment prohibits a State from depriving any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, and from denying to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, but it adds nothing to the rights of one citizen as against another.
Answer:
The correct answer is C.
The Governor of a state is similar to the U.S. President but on a smaller scale.
They both lead the executive branch of the government, the Governor the state and the President the federal one.
A Governor's responsibilities vary from state to state depending on the constitution within that state.
Both the Governor and the President sign bills into laws and both are commanders-in-chiefs, the Governor of the state's National Guard and militia forces, the President of the Army and Navy of the United States.
In some states, the Governor has the veto power to block a legislative law. The same power lies in the hands of the U.S. President.
Both the Governor and the President are ceremonial heads of state and host dignitaries from other countries.
Explanation:
:v