We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States
Let us see all the arguments one by one.
1) It is true that nuclear energy involves no greenhouse gas emissions. In the current state of the environment and world politics (recent Paris agreement on carbon emissions) it is a very important asset. Nuclear energy is much more mass efficient too and the waste after its use will be much smaller in scale than greenhouse emissions. This is the correct answer.
2) It is not easily accessible, at least in its current state. It demands great technological advancements and even greater awareness of technology when one tries to avoid accidents. Only a handful of countries have the infrastructure to have nuclear plants and for the rest of the world it is only a remote reality.
3) The prices are not controlled by an international commission; even if it were so, it is not that big of an advantage, since other traditional means of energy could enter this state of being controlled too.
4) Sadly, the health risks associated with nuclear energy are huge. Radioactivity is very hard to contain or to dispose of it once it is in the wild and the consequences are harsh for the organisms; it affects our DNA and it leads to mutations and increased cancer rates.
Answer:
The African Americans in the post-civil war era responded to the hostile environment of the south by confiscating land on abandoned plantations.
Explanation:
After the Civil War was over, certain amendments were made to the Constitution which then allowed the freed slaves from the southern states to acquire the abandoned plantation lands of the former owners. This right that was given by the Constitution was used by many slaves to confiscate lands of the former owners.
<span> Over the the end of the civil war, roughly 179,000 black men served as soldiers in the U.S.n Army and another 19,000 served in the navy. Nearly 40,000 </span>black soldiers died.