What is the role of Government?
establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, monitor the economy, businesses, and banks; maintaining the education system, roads, and public utilities, regulating the safety of food and medicine
<span>(1) No two people agree on just what would be "fair".
(2) Even if there were agreement, the people with political clout have no reason to want a "fair" system; they want a system that benefits them. There is a reason the Republicans have been pushing through tax cuts for the rich.
(3) The tax "system" includes all the taxes: local, state, and federal. If you want the entire system to be fair, it has to be changed as a whole, not piece by piece. And that would make it hard to start and hard to maintain (any change in tax rates would also have to be coordinated) </span>
To reinforce America's stance as a global superpower as a force not to be reckoned with- as it was a huge show of force.
The Supreme Court upheld the policy of interning Japanese American citizens during World War II.
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the US officially declared war on Japan. Shortly after this, the federal government was suspicious of Japanese American citizens and feared that many of them were spies for Japan. This is why president Franklin D. Roosevelt passed executive order 9066. This law resulted in the placing of Japanese American citizens into internment camps.
Korematsu was one of those citizens placed into an internment camp. He lated sued the federal government saying that this was a violation of his constitutional rights. However, the Supreme Court sided with the government as they felt that wartime actions can justify actions like the one taken by president Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The social inequality in the English class system was stark.Wealthy and middle-class peoplethrived with all of the new opportunities created during the Industrial Revolution.Industrialproduction increased tremendously, bringing wealth and power to Great Britain and this class ofpeople.However, the poor really did not benefit much from the changes. There was noregulation of child labor.They worked long hours and were under paid.The working conditionswere horrible, and because unemployment was so high, the workers did not have a voice in<span>demanding better treatment
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