You can use socratic for that
The indecisive outcome of the Cenepa War — both sides claimed victory — along with the mediation efforts of Argentina, Brazil, and chile.
How members of the lower house of Congress should be elected. -What should be done about the slave trade. -How the power of the executive branch be structured. -How the Constitution should be considered for ratification. -How the states should be represented in national legislature. -the national governments role in issuing paper money. -division of national and state powers. -extent of veto power. -which governmental body should have the power to declare war. -if slaves should be counted in determining representation in national legislature
Hope this helps
Unlike psychology, superstitions change little over time because their followers succumb to <u>"uncritical acceptance and the confirmation bias."</u>
In case you're similar to a great many people, you once in a while take an interest in superstitious reasoning or conduct regularly without acknowledging you're doing it.More than half of Americans confessed to being somewhere around somewhat superstitious, as per an ongoing Gallup survey. Moreover, convictions in witches, apparitions and frequented houses - all mainstream Halloween images - have expanded over the previous decade. Superstitions fill in as outer clarifications for apparently causal occasions" or as a conceivable method to lessen the chances that something terrible will occur.
Hey so how are you you seem pretty down