They each give voting rights to groups previously not allowed to vote. 15-African American voting rights, 19-women's voting rights, 26- eighteen yr old voting rights.
The first 60 questions were easy but I am stuck and confused on these 4 problems. I am especially having trouble on how to do quotes. For each of the following arguments, indicate whether it is valid or invalid, strong or weak. 1. "Poetry is finer and more philosophical than history; for poetry expresses the universal and history only the particular." [Aristotle] 2. "We say that a person behaves in a given way because he possesses a philosophy, but we infer the philosophy from the behavior and therefore cannot use it in any satisfactory way as an explanation, at least until it is in turn explained." [B. F. Skinner] 3. "Someone must have been telling lies about Joseph K., for without having done anything wrong he was arrested one fine morning" [Franz Kafka] 4. If you're eighteen, you're eligible to vote. But you're only seventeen. You're ineligible to vote. I think this one is valid, but I am not sure if it is strong or weak. Thank you for any help given.
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Only men with money and property rights could vote No women regardless of their wealth could vote Only men and lords could be in the house of commons
Before the Reform Act of 1832, only a small percentage of the population in Britain could vote. Around 3% of the population were eligible voters, mainly wealthy landowners and aristocrats. The reform expanded the electorate to include more middle-class citizens.
80 percemt
In 2014, the percentage of people who were eligible to vote varied by country. It is calculated by taking the number of eligible voters divided by the total population of voting age, usually expressed as a percentage.
The vote was 99.73% in favour of joining the 3rd Riech
51%
79.5% i hope this helps (:
impossible to determine by status
A greater percentage of men could vote in the colonies than could vote in England -Plato
A greater percentage of men could vote in the colonies than could vote in England -Plato
voter turnout.