Answer:
Fear of Strong Central Government
The Articles made the national Congress weak on purpose. Having just won independence from Britain, many Americans feared that creating a strong federal government with too much authority over the states would only replace King George III with another tyrant. Instead, they envisioned Congress to be a supervisory body that would tie the states loosely for the common good. The early United States was thus a Confederation of nearly independent states, not the solid federation with a strong government that it is today. The states were in many ways like individual countries bound together to keep Britain at bay.
Americans were especially afraid of Federal Taxes. Remembering the “No taxation without representation!” cry from the Colonial era, they stipulated that only the individual states could levy taxes. This system proved to be a completely ineffective way of bankrolling a federal government, and in fact, many of the states refused to pay their fair share. Most years, in fact, the Congress received less than a third of what it asked for from the states. Moreover, Congress had been granted No Rights To Control Interstate Commerce. States were thus given a free hand to draft conflicting and confusing laws that made cross-border trade difficult.
Planning and Preparation. The Battle of the Somme (1 July - 18 November 1916) was a joint operation between British and French forces intended to achieve a decisive victory over the Germans on the Western Front after 18 months of trench deadlock.
It is important for a ruler to be strong because it helps support the idea and keep a ruler active
Answer:
Nigeria has a mixed economic system
Explanation:
variety of private freedom, combined with centralized economic planning and government regulation
The first sensational personalities that appeared in the media were suicidal. Newspapers that became very popular in the mid-1880s, such as the New York Sun or the New York Herald, collected for the first time in their pages stories of ordinary people instead of major events with famous people from the political, scientific or artistic fields. Suicides were the characters that for the first time and in most cases began to occupy space in these newspapers.