Sarah Childress Polk is the first lady who banned dancing and card-playing in white house.
Jamestown was important because it was the first successful English colony in North America.
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Most philosopher saw the social contract as an arrangement that let citizens leave the state of nature and enter civil society while the state of nature emerges when the social contract became a threat to the government.
<h3>What was Hobbes views on the topic?</h3>
The philosopher defines the state of nature as a situation whereby there were no enforceable criteria of right and wrong, that is, we all took for ourselves all that we could.
He also defined the social contract theory as a method of justifying political principles by an appeal to the agreement that would be made among suitably situated rational, free, and equal persons
<h3>What was Lockean view on the topics?</h3>
This philosopher defines the state of nature as the beginning of a process in which a state for a government is formed.
He also defined the social contract theory as a theory that creates a government through the consent of the people to be ruled by the majority.
Read more about political philosopher
<em>brainly.com/question/2941042</em>
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I belive the answer is the filibusters.
The state of Louisiana enacted a law that required separate railway cars for blacks and whites. In 1892, Homer Adolph Plessy-- who was seven-eighths Caucasian-- took a seat in a "white's only" car of a Louisiana train. He refused to move to the car reserved for blacks and was arrested.
QUESTION:
Is Louisiana's law mandating racial segregation on its trains an unconstitutional infringement on both the privileges and immunities and the equal protection clauses of the 14th amendment. (Is it unconstitutional, basically.)
ANSWER: No the state law is within constitutional boundaries. The judges based their decision on the separate-but-equal doctrine (keep in mind this was in 1896), that separate facilities for blacks and whites satisfied the Fourteenth Amendment so long as they were equal. In this case, they ruled that segregation does not, in itself, constitute unlawful discrimination.
Basically everything about Plessey v. Ferguson.