Answer:
a
a constitution that established the first US government
The last three are the correct answers. I hope this helps you!
<u>Let's match each type of power with its definition</u>
- concurrent powers: <u>powers that both national and state governments have/do such as collecting taxes </u>. They refer to those powers which are shared by the different goverment levels existing in the federal structure: at the federal, state, province and local levels.
- delegated powers: <u>Powers specifically given to the national government such as establishing post offices.</u> These are also known as enumerated powers and are contained in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution of the United States.
- denied powers: <u>powers neither the federal or state government have (such as making a law that would prevent the establishment of religion). </u>These are powers which cannot be exercised by any level within a federal goverment, for example, allowing slavery (explicitly forbidden by 13th Amendment) denying voting rights to certain citizens (explicitly condemned in the Voting Rights Act from 1965).
- implied powers: <u>powers that are suggested and allowed due to the necessary and proper/elastic clause such as establishing the interstate highway system. </u>These powers are not explicitly included in the US Constitution but can be derived from others than are.
- inherent powers: <u> </u><u>powers that don't have to be given in the Constitution - they are just a part of government, such as protecting the country from attack</u>. These are goverment powers which are not explicitly stated in a Constitution but are implicit in a sovereign state and for its rulers.
A state in which opposing forces or influences are balanced.
It was August 7, 1964 when the Gulf of Tunkin
Resolution passed by the US Congress right after the alleged attack on two US
naval destroyers stationed off the coast of Vietnam. The Gulf of Tonkin
Resolution viably propelled America's full-scale inclusion in the Vietnam War.
Though there is no formal declaration of war, this also gave President Johnson
approval "to take all necessary steps, including the use of armed force,
to assist any member or protocol state of the Southeast Asia Collective Defense
Treaty requesting assistance in defense of its freedom." This has been
used by Johnson and Pres. Richard Nixon as a justification for escalated
involvement in Indochina.