Answer:
C.
Explanation:
They serve until they die, retire, resign, impeached, etc. But basically they can be judge until they die if they want to.
Answer:
Martin Luther King was the father of Martin Luther King Jr. He was a priest at his church.
Explanation:
<h3>Correct answer is:</h3><h2>The Ninth Amendment.</h2><h3>Explanation:</h3>
"The inventory in the Constitution, of some rights, shall not be interpreted to reject or discredit others held by the people."
The Ninth Amendment or Amendment IX of the United States Constitution is the part of the Bill of Rights that declares that there are different equities that may subsist apart from the ones explicitly stated, and even though they are not noted, it does not indicate they can be disrupted.
The plantation system developed for several reasons. The Southern colonies had been founded by companies or proprietors who wished to make a profit, and they accordingly encouraged cash crops like tobacco (in the Chesapeake) and rice (in the Low Country). These crops were labor intensive, which meant that growers turned first to indentured servants and then to African slaves as a labor supply (so, too, did sugar planters in the Caribbean.) They also required a great deal of land and capital, which meant that due to an economic principle called "economies of scale," cash crops, especially rice, favored very wealthy people with large landholdings and access to large labor forces. So in the Southern colonies/United States, the economic realities of staple crop production favored the formation of large farms, or plantations. Cotton, which emerged as the biggest cash crop in the nineteenth-century South, was less shaped by economies of scale--many small planters and farmers could profitably raise the crop. But even still, the largest cotton planters in places like Alabama and Mississippi dominated the Southern economy and increasingly its politics. Large capital investments in land and enslaved people made the production of large amounts of cotton profitable, so the region's dependence on cash crops continued to foster the plantation system.
The most notable New South initiative was the introduction of textile mills in the South. Beginning in the early 1880s, northern capitalists invested in building textile mills in the southern Appalachian foothills of North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia, drawn to the region by the fact that they could pay southern mill workers at half the rate of workers in northern mills. Due to these low wages, the mills gave only a modest boost to the southern economies in which they were built.^3
3