I say Israel - and I hope this is taken in an utterly nonpartisan way, which takes absolutely no position vis-a-vis the legitimacy of either conservatism or the Israeli state. I just think some core aspects of Israeli government and society are in line with mainstream US conservatism: a free-market liberal democracy of course, but with formal religious-ethnic affiliation, compulsory military service with training on firearms (and licensing to possess same) for all citizens, and a generally hawkish stance on questions of military and defense. They are also highly security-oriented, some would say in a much more effective way than the US government, and its security apparatus employs profiling techniques which almost undoubtedly have a racial component (<span>and </span><span>conservatives would no doubt want to insist that these two facts are directly related). I believe that taxation rates are roughly on par with that in the US, if not a bit less... though not nearly as low as Switzerland. </span>
Its a federal law intended to check the president's power<span> to commit the United States to an armed conflict without the consent of the U.S. Congress.</span>
Explanation:
World War I was the final rallying cry for the temperance cause, but it had other effects on Prohibition and its 13 years of enforcement as well. Cultural changes during World War I had a broader impact on the following decade
Answer:
Shays’ Rebellion demonstrated the high degree of internal conflict lurking beneath the surface of post-Revolutionary life as for why they were mad was because the state government was making farmers pay high taxes. If they could not pay these taxes, they would be thrown in jail, and they could lose their farms. They asked the government to stop.
Explanation: