Slaughtehouse-Five has a very peculiar structure. Vonnegut's idea of time is reflected in it, it's not linear. As a result, there are a lot of contrasting images. An example of this is the contrast between the following Paradisiac image:
<em>Under morphine, Billy had a dream of giraffes in a garden. The giraffes were following gravel paths (...) Billy was a giraffe, too (...) The giraffes accepted Billy as one of their own, as a harmless creature as preposterously specialized as themselves. Two approached him from opposite sides, leaned against him. They had long, muscular upper lips which they could shape like the bells of bugles. They kissed him with these. They were female giraffes-cream and lemon yellow. </em>
With an quite calamitous image not too far from that part of the book:
<em>Rosewater was twice as smart as Billy, but he and Billy were dealing with similar crises in similar ways. They had both found life meaningless, partly because of what they had seen in war. Rosewater, for instance, had shot a fourteen-year-old fireman, mistaking him for a German soldier (...) And Billy had seen the greatest massacre in European history, which was the firebombing of Dresden. </em>
The Three-Fifths Compromise, which meant as slave ownership was legal and most of the southern states own slaves. Due to the representatives they needed to have, only three-fifths of the slaves in each state would add up to the population.
Another compromise was the Great Compromise or the Connecticut Compromise which stated to create a bicameral or two houses to represent the states by population, the house of representatives and equally which was the senate.
The Answer is A, Boycott. I took the test
States being able to issue their own paper money would lead to problems such as counterfeiting and people not being able to use money from a certain state in a different state.
Answer:
1993
Explanation:
November 1, 1993 in the Netherlands.