1) the central government could not collect debts from the states
2) 9 states needed to approve congressional legislation
3)all 13 colonies needed to amend the Articles
<span>4) the central government could not raise revenue</span>
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Black and white abolitionists often had different agendas by the 1840s, and certainly in the 1850s. But one of the greatest frustrations that many black abolitionists faced was the racism they sometimes experienced from their fellow white abolitionists. In many cases, within the Garrisonian movement in particular, the role of the black speaker or the black writer or the black abolitionist was, in some ways, prescribed, as the famous case of Frederick Douglass' relationship with the Garrisionians.
<span>The Garrisionians wanted Douglass to simply get up and tell his story, to tell his narrative on the platform.</span>
Yes in May 1961, where a series of civil rights actions in which integrated groups of activists rode a commercial buses for example is a grey hound and trail ways, regardless of the laws in the individual states they passed through. These were designed to test that ruling and help overturn jim crow laws in southern states. these are just some parts of the history that we should always remember.
Despite the Great Depression , culture in the 1930s both commercial and funded by New Deal programs as part of the relief effort, flourished
Answer:
John Locke's support for the principle of popular sovereignty.