Basically as bad as i got, insane hours with little pay, common to lose limbs, girls were raped all the time, small tunnels, very very hot i could go on xD
It put French into debt so they couldn't help us in our further affairs with Britain. Umm there's not really that much
McDonald v. City of Chicago, case in which on June 28, 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled (5–4) that the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms,” applies to state and local governments as well as to the federal government.
The case arose in 2008, when Otis McDonald, a retired African American custodian, and others filed suit in U.S. District Court to challenge provisions of a 1982 Chicago law that, among other things, generally banned the new registration of handguns and made registration a prerequisite of possession of a firearm. The next day the National Rifle Association and others filed separate lawsuits challenging the Chicago law and an Oak Park, Ill., law that generally prohibited the possession or carrying of handguns and the carrying of other firearms except rifles or shotguns in one’s home or place of business. Each suit alleged that the law violated the right of individuals to possess and carry weapons, which the Supreme Court had found to be protected by the Second Amendment in District of Columbia v. Heller (2008). (Anticipating this finding, the plaintiffs in McDonald v. City of Chicago filed suit on the same morning that the decision in Heller was announced.) The crucial question, however, was whether the Second Amendment is applicable to the states and their political subdivisions. Citing “selective incorporation,” the Supreme Court’s gradual application to the states of most of the protections of the Bill of Rights through the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment (which prohibits the states from denying life, liberty, or property without due process of law), the plaintiffs argued that the Second Amendment is applicable through that clause as well as through the amendment’s “privileges or immunities” clause (which forbids the states from abridging the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States)
<u><em>Have a good day, afternoon or night!</em></u>
<u><em></em></u>
<u><em></em></u>
<u><em></em></u>
<u><em></em></u>
<u><em></em></u>
<u><em></em></u>
<u><em></em></u>
<u><em></em></u>
<u><em></em></u>
<em> ~Dreamer1331~</em>
Answer:
The Virgin of Rocks (1483-1485), The last supper (1498), and Mona Lisa (1504-1505)
Explanation:
• Mary Todd Lincoln fue la esposa del decimosexto presidente, Abraham Lincoln. / Mary Ann Lincoln was the wife of the 16th President, Abraham Lincoln.
• Ella vino de una familia grande y adinerada de Kentucky, y era buen educada. / She came from a large, wealthy Kentucky family, and was well educated.
• Ella y Lincoln tuvieron cuatro hijos juntos y tres murieron. / She and Lincoln had four sons together, but three died.
• Mary sufrió muchos problemas de salud física y mental durante su vida. / Mary suffered from many physical and mental health issues during her life.
• Su familia eran dueños de esclavos. / Her family were slaveholders.
• Cuando Mary tenía seis años, su madre murió al dar a luz. Su padre luego se casó con Elizabeth "Betsy" Humphreys y tuvieron nueve hijos juntos. / When Mary was six, her mother died in childbirth. Her father then married Elizabeth "Betsy" Humphreys and had nine children together.