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the indian constitution
States' Rights is the theory that state and local government's actions and laws in dealing with social and economic problems are supreme to federal actions and laws. The theory goes back to the founding of our nation. Jefferson and Madison advocated states' rights in the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions. John C. Calhoun's Theory of Nullification, the South's justification for declaring independence from the US, also advocates states' rights. The argument of the States' Rights theory is that the Constitution is a compact between states, not between people. The states created the national government and gave it only limited power. States' Rights supporters believe that the state is closest to the citizen and can better reflect their wishes.
The Theory of States Rights states that the rights of the state supersedes those of the nation, that the state is part of the Union of its own will and may secede from it when it pleased.
In American political discourse, states rights refers to political powers reserved for the state governments rather than the federal government according to the United States Constitution, reflecting especially the enumerated powers of Congress and the Tenth Amendment (Wikipedia.com) DN216 FTW
The answer is Capitalism
The unitary theory holds that the President has authority over the entire executive branch of the government. This idea comes from Article II of the United States Constitution, which vests executive power in the president.
United States does not believe in the divine right theory. According to the doctrine of the divine rights theory, only God is the one who can judge a king. During the glorious revolution, United States abandoned the divine rights theory.
Nullification
competence theoryType your answer here...
poop
They justified secession with the theory of states' rights.
They said the original Union was a collection of states that had joined it voluntarily, and were therefore equally free to quit.