Answer:
A. To reduce overcrowding in immigration tenement
Answer:
They did drastically.
Explanation:
The Declaration of Independence wasn't really framework for a solid government. In fact, immediately after the declaration was penned, it was generally assumed that the colonies would function as sovereign states all tied to one another- similarly to the pre-Soviet Russian Empire. By the time the Constitution was being written, our plans had changed completely. We had made the choice to be one completely solid country, and so the goals changed from freeing individual colonies from British rule so they may self-govern to creating a solid government that was rigid, yet flexible enough to handle the constantly shifting and evolving political and social status of the young nation.
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Answer: because the authority of judicial review can declare that laws and actions of local, state, or natioanl government are invalid if tehy contradict the Constitution.
Answer:
In the United States before 1865, a slave state was a state in which the slave trade was legal, while a free state was one in which it was not. There were some enslaved persons in most free states in the 1840 census, and the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 specifically stated that an enslaved person remained enslaved even when she or he fled to a free state. Between 1812 and 1850, it was considered important that the number of free and slave states were kept in balance, so new states were admitted in pairs.
The war started off by the British and French having a border dispute that led to a seven year long global conflict. This war was won by the British, but by entering in this war, they went broke. In order to restore economic balance, they taxed the colonies. In the long run, this made the colonies fed up with the British demanding more money. This sparked the American revolution, and it also brought France and Spain into this as they were both bitter about the war and took any chance to weaken Britain.