Correct answer: B. The people
Explanation:
The Constitution is the founding document of our form of government, but the US Constitution itself asserts that the people are the ones who hold the power to form a government.
When the Constitution of the United States begins with the words, "We the people," it is asserting that the power to organize a government is vested in the people of the country that is to be governed. This was an idea that the American founding fathers took from Enlightenment philosophers such as John Locke. In his <em>Second Treatise on Civil Government, </em>Locke set forth the idea of a "social contract." According to his view, a government's power to govern comes from the consent of the people themselves -- those who are to be governed. This was a change from the previous ideas of "divine right monarchy" -- that a king ruled because God appointed him to be the ruler. Locke repudiated the views of divine right monarchy in his <em>First Treatise on Civil Government</em>. In his <em>Second Treatise, </em>Locke argued for the rights of the people to create their own governments according to their own desires and for the sake of protecting their own life, liberty, and property. The American founding fathers adopted Locke's view about government, and sought to form a government of the people, by the people, and for the people.
Upton Sinclair summed up his purpose in writing The Jungle in the following quote: I aimed at the public's heart and by accident hit its stomach. ... The Jungle is directly credited with helping to pass the Pure Food and Drug and Meat Inspection Act in 1906.
Answer:
One topic sentence and three supporting detail sentences