Answer:
I wouldn't like to share it with a friend
Answer:
During its Congressional sessions, the United States Congress considers hundreds of bills and resolutions that are filed by members of Congress. If a bill makes it through the legislative process and becomes law, the bill is forwarded to the Archivist of the United States for filing and publication. The Archivist assigns a public or private law number, depending on the type of legislation, and it is first officially published as what is known as a "slip law." All of the legislation passed by a particular session of Congress is then compiled and published in a bound volume of the U.S. Statutes at Large that contains all of the session laws passed by that particular Congress. Every six years, all federal legislation currently in effect is compiled and arranged by subject matter in the U.S. Code.
It’s
C. Elasticity of demand measures how the amount of good changes when it’s price goes up or down.
<span>This is of course a somewhat subjective question, but most would agree that its biggest success was greatly limiting the amount of corruption in big business--usually through increasing government regulation--while its biggest failure was not continuing to do so throughout the 1900s </span>
Question
How can overcrowding contribute to the collapse of a civilization?
Answer: The more people you have the more resources/food is necessary to keep them alive you have more people then resources/food they civilization will collapse, because its over populating the area more than the civilization can supply.