The next letter would be S.
Answer: Well im guessing all they are asking you to do is write or say in a discussion or what you would say in a group discussion. Here are the major steps you must follow if you are given the role of starting a group discussion
1.Introduce Yourself First. As the initiator, it is pivotal that you introduce yourself before telling everyone about the topic.
2.Be Clear & Coherent.
3.Present the Topic with an Interesting Take
(And the last step is to)
4.Efficiently Use your Time
Explanation:
I don't know if that helps but make sure you Discuss with you peer or group
Answer:
Explanation:
They both are right especially during the time of their presidency. Thomas Jefferson believed that a strong federal government proved itself to be a necessity although he probably didn't like the idea at all. After all the founding fathers tried the Articles of Confederation (ratified 1781) and found out that it didn't really work.
Eight years later, they wrote the constitution that we currently live under. The federal government was given a lot more power which it needed. That doesn't mean it was fully embraced. Just that it was the next step. If anything, for all Jefferson's idealism, he was a pragmatist. If it worked, do it and be content.
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Lincoln saw the whole situation quite differently. The Civil War began with the underlying cause of state's rights. Later on (1863), Lincoln turned to the question of slavery. There was a hole even in the 1789 Constitution and that hole came back to haunt everyone. The question was individual rights. Slaves. The south could not easily survive without slave labor and because slaves were expensive, they were more or less humanely treated. After the Civil War, their condition was a nightmare. Lincoln address the entire question of what was missing in the constitution although he did not bring any amendments to correct what he knew had to be corrected. He may have done so if he was not murdered. As it was it was left to Johnson to bring in the 13th amendment, which abolished slavery.
An example of attribution a tendency