<h3>I spent a few years writing about the federal lawsuit of ACLU vs. Yakima, which would become a landmark voting rights lawsuit in Washington state. I remember at the time regular folks, politicians and government officials (all of them white and older) that there was no longer any such thing as voter suppression in the United States of America. That had all been settled in the 1960s, they argued, and the idea that such racist practices existed still today was speculative at best and, besides, impossible to prove. The city lost the lawsuit and was ordered to pay nearly $2 million to the ACLU in addition to a similar number the city wasted litigating the case. The ruling led a few other Central Washington cities with growing (and ignored) Latino populations to preemptively change their council election systems to legally provide for more representation. A couple years later Evergreen State lawmakers approved a state voting rights act to increase representation. Unfortunately, positive developments in Washington state haven’t been seen around much of the country. For nearly a decade, much of the country has gone backwards on voting rights.</h3>
<h2>please mark in brain list </h2>
The sequence of events led to the court hearing in the case Marbury v. Madison is because Marbury petitioned the Supreme Courtto force the new Secretary of State, James Madison, to deliver the documents. ... The Marbury v.Madison decision expanded the power of the Supreme Court in general, by announcing that the 1789 law which gave the Court jurisdiction in this case was unconstitutional.
Answer:
They both wanted to stand up for freedom and its principles.
Edith Cavell was executed by Germany for treason in 1915. Edith Cavell image was used as an anti-German propaganda and the image depicts the execution of a British nurse by the German army.
The British government decided to use her story as propaganda which made her be one of the most prominent female casualties of world war 1, due to her sex, nursing profession and her heroic approach to death. She became an iconic figure of propaganda to the British military recruitment after endless pamphlets, newspaper articles, images and books were published telling her story.
They were being discriminated and relocated