1. The freedom of religion, speech, and to peacefully assemble together.
2. The right to own a gun.
3. The right to not house a solider.
4. The right to not be searched or have something taken away within reason.
5. The right to life, liberty, property, and no double jeopardy or self-incrimination.
6. The right to a speedy trial, public trial, and with a jury of your peers.
7. The right to an jury trial in a civil case.
8. Protection from excessive bail, and cruel and unusual punishments.
9. The rights not listed in the Constitution.
10. Any rights not given to the federal government are given to the states.
11. Protects the states from law suits.
12. There are separate ballets for the President and Vice President.
13. The abolishment of slavery.
14. Equal protection under the Constitution for all United States citizens.
15. No voting discrimination of race.
16. Income tax is legal.
17. Popular vote for United States Senate.
18. Prohibition of alcohol.
19. Women's right to vote.
20. Moving of dates for terms of presidency.
21. Repeal of prohibition of alcohol.
22. Limits the terms Presidents can serve.
23. Washington D.C. have the right to vote for President.
24. No poll taxes are allowed.
25. The succession for presidency shall something happen to the President.
26. The minimum voting age is 18.
27. Congress cannot get a pay raise until the next term.
Answer:
Pork Barrel
Explanation:
Pork Barrel is a derogatory term rooted in American English and refers to the allocation of the resources to a small segment of people in exchange for political support, which are funded by a larger community. Since the 1880's the pork-barrel politics is represented in the executive and legislative branch of the United States. When a government leader use resources in localized projects and in his area of influence and the cost of which is beard by common taxpayers it is denoted by the metaphor Pork Barrel politics.
the answer is D encouraged slaveholder's resistance to abolitionist activists
The correct answer is letter B
Episodic memory is divided into anterograde and retrograde. Anterograde memory consists of our ability to consolidate new memories from a point, while the retrograde consists of remembering experiences that happened earlier in our life. To illustrate the whole process of declarative memory, let us return to the situation of the vacation trip. Telling a friend about the trip to a certain place is a good example of the use of semantic memory, but the episodic fits in this example when you want to tell, for example, how the trip was on the first days of vacation.
Let's say it was raining, which made it impossible to go to the beach as planned. Then, through semantic memory, what happened is expressed, but episodic allows us to evoke what happened at a given time and place of the trip. Still in this example of the trip, the retrograde memory would enter as the capacity to evoke facts that had occurred previously. For example, a friend's suggestion when recommending taking the trip at a certain time of the year or visiting a specific place. While the antegrade would be all over again during the trip, which would now be considered past time, since it is being told to someone.