Answer:
A. They wish people would accept their familial bond.
Explanation:
got it right on edge
Answer:
D. racially-segregated public schools .
Explanation:
The landmark US Supreme Court´s sentence Brown v. Board of Education of 1954 stated that racial segregation of children in public schools was unconstitutional. It reverted the 1896 Plessy versus Ferguson decision that upheld segregated but equal public facilities as constitutional. Brown v. Board of Education gave impulse to the Civic Rights Movement.
Answer:
Nitrate levels in the water are higher than permitted.
Explanation:
Groundwater supplies drinking water in eastern Washington's Columbia Basin. Approximately 20% of all monitored wells in Adams, Franklin, and Grant Counties had nitrate concentrations above the US Environmental Protection Agency's nitrate contamination threshold. After getting approval from the Washington State Department of Ecology, the Columbia Basin Ground Water Management Area was set up in February 1998. At first, the main goal was to lower the amount of nitrate in the ground water.
C. Worn-out. Cliche is a French word that has a sense of something worn / something <span>repeated.</span>
The correct answer is:
1. The Federalist essays
4. The promise to create a Bill of Rights.
Explanation:
The Federalist essays or papers were written by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and John Jay in the late 1780s. Those essays were sent under the pseudonym "Publius" to newspapers to influence the voters in favor of ratification of the Constitution of the United States arguing that it would help to give power to the federal government so it could act on behalf of the nation's interest and that it would preserve the Union, the essays also discussed general problems of politics, and were published all together as a book in 1788. The Federalist papers influenced doubtful states to ratify the Constitution.
<em>Anti federalists thought the Constitution gave too much power to the federal government</em>, and that it needed a Bill of Rights to make sure the federal government wouldn't abuse its power, so during the ratification process Massachusetts, Virginia and New York pressured for the creation of the Bill of Rights, and James Madison (federalist) agreed to write the Bill of Rights to ensure ratification of the United States Constitution.