Answer:
Fundamentally important so that smaller states can have equal power in electing individuals to larger ones.
For example, without the electoral system, the states of Wyoming, Vermont, Alaska, North and South Dakota, Delaware, Rhode Island, Montana and more would be utterly eclipsed even if just half of California voted against their candidate.
Answer: d -- it's the only answer where you're having actual contact with someone else, live at the moment.
Its 1, 3, 4 because life was bad during the great depression like me...
Hamilton's
next objective was to create a Bank of the United States, modeled after
the Bank of England. A national bank would collect taxes, hold
government funds, and make loans to the government and borrowers. One
criticism directed against the bank was "unrepublican"--it would
encourage speculation and corruption. The bank was also opposed on
constitutional grounds. Adopting a position known as "strict
constructionism," Thomas Jefferson and James Madison charged that a
national bank was unconstitutional since the Constitution did not
specifically give Congress the power to create a bank.
Hamilton
responded to the charge that a bank was unconstitutional by formulating
the doctrine of "implied powers." He argued that Congress had the power
to create a bank because the Constitution granted the federal government
authority to do anything "necessary and proper" to carry out its
constitutional functions (in this case its fiscal duties).
In
1791, Congress passed a bill creating a national bank for a term of 20
years, leaving the question of the bank's constitutionality up to
President Washington. The president reluctantly decided to sign the
measure out of a conviction that a bank was necessary for the nation's
financial well-being.
hope it helps