The correct answer to this open question is the following,
Americans would be expected to "ask what they could do for their country" in their commitment to do anything necessary in order to cooperate with the federal government of the United States under the leadership of President John F. Kennedy.
I think I would have reacted with emotion and support to his message during his inaugural address because President Kennedy represented hope for the American people during difficult times of the Cold War, where the Soviet Union and the United States had many differences and confrontations due to the arms race, the space race, and the spread of Communism.
The reason why it takes a long time to ratify the Articles of Confederation is that U.S. just declared independent from Britain, in other words, they just passed the Declaration of Independence, and in order to keep a country on track, they need some sorts of form of government, and they don't want to repeating the history, or have another tyrant, or a king, to rule over them again, which is a part of reason why they declared independent (the actual reasons is the king taxes us for no reason and we can't participate in the government), so they need all of the 13 states to approve, or sign, the Articles of Confederation, majority of them signed it, some of them having issues about the rights in the Articles of Confederation, so someone, I forgot his name, promised to includes all of the rights into the Articles of Confederation, which they can't do it instantly, which later known as the Bill of Rights (the first 10 amendments), so it takes longer to get the whole Articles of Confederation to be approved, or ratified.
Hope this help, my English is not that well so please excuse for it.
Answer:
Zeus and Hera were husband and wife
Explanation
Zeus wanted to marry his sister, Hera. Eventually, Hera agreed, but being the goddess of marriage, she made Zeus promise to be a faithful husband. Zeus wasn't and had many affairs with other gods and mortals, and Hera got mad and tried to destroy many of them.