Answer:
B
Explanation:
Popular culture, in this sense, is created when a certain product "advertises" a figure which is already popular. (Celebrities, Memes ect.) This is usually in the form of merchandise/branding. (Nike, Adidas, Apple).
Answer:
4. Mary Hayes
Explanation
Became known as Molly Pitcher for bringing the soldiers water while under fire. She too would take her husband’s place at a cannon
2. Margaret Corbin
Explanation
Took over firing a cannon after her husband was killed in battle - was hit by enemy fire herself
8. Abigail Adams
Explanation
Worked behind the scenes to try to gain more rights for women and for slaves.
1. Deborah Sampson
Explanation
pretended to be male and fought in the Continental Army
3. Hannah Blair
Explanation
had a farm in NC where she would hide patriots and supply them with food and medical care
6. Mercy Otis Warren
Explanation
Wrote a play about the British who were blockading Boston. The play helped to turn some that were initially Loyalists into Patriots.
7. Phyllis Wheatley
Explanation
Became the first African American woman, and the first slave, to publish a book of Patriotic poetry
5. Anne Marie Lane
Explanation
She enlisted as a soldier in the Revolutionary War, pretending to be a man. She fought in four major battles till she was wounded, and it was discovered that she was a woman
To defend its nation against threats from an aggressor nation
Answer:
The Supreme Court decision that decided the 2000 Presidential Election should go down in history as one of the court's most ill-conceived judgments. In issuing its poorly-reasoned ruling in Bush v. Gore, the court majority unnecessarily exposed itself to charges of partisanship and risked undermining the court's stature as an independent, impartial arbiter of the law. Although the court majority correctly identified constitutional problems in the specific recount proceedings ordered by the Florida Supreme Court, the decision to end all recount attempts did immeasurable damage to the equal protection rights the court claimed to be guarding, since it favored a convenient and timely tabulation of ballots over an accurate recording of the vote. In the controversy that followed this decision, some critics of the majority decision argued that the court had no business taking on Bush v. Gore in the first place, that it should have remained solely within the Florida courts (Ginsburg, J. [Dissent] Bush v. Gore [2000]). This paper will argue that the court was correct to intervene but that umm the resulting decision was flawed and inconsistent, with potentially serious, adverse implications for the Federal judiciary if the court continues to issue rulings in this way.
Explanation: