I could be because the flavor
I assume you're talking about the Revolutionary era. The colonists wanted to go to war for their independence. They didn't have representation in the government, yet they were still taxed.
I believe it is A. he was a black loyalist who fought for the British, so that one makes the most sense to me.
<span>The answer is letter C.
The power to sign treaties is not a shared power by the federal and state governments. It is mostly the responsibility of the legislative and executive departments of the US government. Treaties are conditions that have been voted upon the majority of the legislative department that still needs to approved by the executive part of government.
Other decisions like levying taxes, borrowing money, and maintaining a court systems are powers both shared by the federal and state governments. <span>
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Answer:
John C, Calhoun was a ardent supporter of slavery and a Vice-President of the United States and a senator from South Carolina. He believed African Americans were intellectual inferior.
Explanation: