Answer:
<h3>In a perfect free enterprise system, there would be no government involvement in the economy. This means the government would have no say in where people buy goods/resources, they would not tell business how much product to make, and they would not tell businesses how much to charge for services</h3>
<h2>Hope it's helpful....!!</h2>
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Answer:
I hope this helps
Explanation:
The situation when I had recieved poor service was when I went to a Hampton hotel. When I arrived the front desk clerk did not greet me, she acted as if I wasn't standing there until I got her attention then she rudely said "Can I help you?" Then I told her that I had a reservation and I wondered if my room was ready, she says " Let me check" so I waited and my room was not yet ready so I had to wait a while longer. The staff should have been trained with the fifteen five rule, meaning when you see a guest at least 15 feet away you make eye contact and smile and at 5 feet you greet with good morning or good afternoon
1.William Lloyd Garrison was an American abolitionist who published a newspaper called The Liberator which was an abolitionist piece of literature and kept on publishing until the end of slavery. Reverend Lovejoy or Elijah Parish Lovejoy was a reverend who published anti-slavery articles in various newspapers.
2.One of the major effects of the cotton gin on slavery was the increased need for slaves to keep up with the profitability that came with its invention.
Answer:
(C.)
The passage of the fifteenth amendment led to the establishment of long-awaited true political equality.
Explanation:
Explanation: The Fifteenth Amendment that was done to the United States Constitution guaranteed the African Americans the right to vote in the elections conducted thenceforth.
The Northern states enjoyed increasing political representation and power born from rapid population growth. Because of the South’s investment in agriculture any attack on slavery, which was witnessed in the North, was an attack on Southern economy itself. Webster viewed slavery as a matter of historical reality rather than moral principle. Congress had prohibited slavery in the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 and divided regions into slave and free in the 1820 Missouri Compromise. Slavery where it existed could not be eradicated but it could not also take root in the newly acquired agriculturally barren lands on the southwest.