The statement that is most likely to come out from <em>a voter who is informed</em> is<em> “ I know who is running for the Senate in my state.”</em>
According to Thomas Jefferson, there is a certain amount of rottenness that enters into people when they run for public office. Its, therefore, reasonable and wise for voters to be informed about this. He stresses the importance of knowing the Constitution, the restraints it places upon the elected officials and the rights that are in possession of the people. He notes that issues are usually devices used by rotten politicians who don't care about one's rights but will usually like your vote.
<u>It is true</u>. <em><u>On January 1, 1863</u></em>, as the nation approached its third year of civil war, President Abraham Lincoln issued the<u> final Emancipation Proclamation</u>. <u>The preliminary Proclamation</u> was issued the year before, <em><u>on September 22nd</u></em>. <u>It declared "that all persons held as slaves" within the Southern rebellious states "are, and henceforward shall be free."</u>
Menes united upper and lower Egypt by sending an army down the Nile and defeated the king of lower Eygpt
The president cannot make laws. Only the legislative branch (the Congress) can make laws. But the president can certainly veto laws and make official appointments. And as commander-in-chief of the military, the president also oversees the armed forces. So the only power in your list that the president does NOT have is to make laws.