Answer:
D) The Soviet economy was a tremendous success story; the USSR would still be together if it were not for the ethnic differences.
Explanation:
The Soviet economy was not a tremendous success, in fact, it was in many aspects a failure (although it was a success in some fields).
The other 3, true statements in the question give us a clue why:
The Soviet system benefited the center (Russia) disproportionally, leaving aside the other, peripheral republics in Central Asia, the Caucasus, The Baltics, and Eastern Europe, which were often very poor.
The Soviet system used a planned economy, instead of a market economy, and this led to many errors in the production of goods and services. Resources were often poured in unprofitable industries over more profitable ones, and the geographical location of the economic sectors often did not make sense.
Things that in a market system would likely not happen, ocurred in the soviet planned economy because the planners did not realize their mistakes.
Drifting friendship because it’s talking about how they are not talking as much
1. The constitution provides a framework (rules, structures) for the function of the government (for example, it names the parts of the government)
2. The constitution divides the power between the states and the federal government. This division is called "federalism".
3. The constitution names individual rights of the citizens, which cannot be violated. Other laws in the country will have to then agree with the constitution.
Answer: Findings where EEGs were used to measure brain activity in the motor cortex show that the subconscious activity preceded and influenced the conscious choice.
Explanation: It has been found from the repeated electroencephalogram tests conducted on the subjects that even before the brain consciously makes any decision, the subconscious influences it and the decision taken is thus not completely based on rational and subjective thought. The tests show that even though the brain registers an activity associated with conscious decision-making within 2/10th of a second, the motor cortex registers another activity even before a conscious decision is made by the brain.