<span>The 14th
Amendment to the United States Constitution is a legal document that will
explain the reasoning for the intended effect on it to the American people. It
was reconstructed to reinforce the Civil Rights Act of 1866. The main goal is to
protect the rights of the recently freed slaves during the post-Civil war era
with guaranteed privileges and immunities of citizenship, due process and equal
protection, which until now play a major role in constitutional politics.</span>
It is "<span>civil body politic."
</span>
<span>The core beliefs of the Republican Party are centered on the idea that each person is responsible for their own place within society. The party believes that the government’s role is to enable the people to secure the benefits of society for themselves, their families, and for those who are unable to do so for themselves. Republicans believe in limiting the Government’s intervention in the work of the individual towards prosperity. The government should only intervene when society cannot function at the level of the individual. This also means that the party believes in keeping the government as close to the individual as possible, and should be focused mainly on the state and community level, not centered at a federal level.
Good luck, mate. Hope i helped</span>
Hamilton's next objective was to create a Bank of the United States, modeled after the Bank of England. A national bank would collect taxes, hold government funds, and make loans to the government and borrowers. One criticism directed against the bank was "unrepublican"--it would encourage speculation and corruption. The bank was also opposed on constitutional grounds. Adopting a position known as "strict constructionism," Thomas Jefferson and James Madison charged that a national bank was unconstitutional since the Constitution did not specifically give Congress the power to create a bank.
Hamilton responded to the charge that a bank was unconstitutional by formulating the doctrine of "implied powers." He argued that Congress had the power to create a bank because the Constitution granted the federal government authority to do anything "necessary and proper" to carry out its constitutional functions (in this case its fiscal duties).
In 1791, Congress passed a bill creating a national bank for a term of 20 years, leaving the question of the bank's constitutionality up to President Washington. The president reluctantly decided to sign the measure out of a conviction that a bank was necessary for the nation's financial well-being.
Hello,
Option D.) <span>is most similar to a myth.
All the other story summaries represent possible real-world cases.
Faith xoxo</span>