ok if your looking at this answer you just got sad because i don't even know the answer srry
nothing; it leaves the organization to the states
There is no amendment in the US Constitution regarding State governments being no longer necessary. What the US Constitution does say is that whatever the US Constitutions laws do not cover, belong to the individual States to determine.
The government gets its power to govern as enumerated in the declaration of independence from the constitution.
The fact that they AREN'T mentioned in the Constitution leaves the issue open to interpretation. Some people saw a need, decided a local gov. was the solution, and that the Constitution didn't say you couldn't do it, so they created a local gov.
No
A small, writtern warning, like on a bottle of bleach, is an "advertencia."
sans avertissement
Because governments say it does.
Which lights are lit? What do they say? There are many warning lights
Both versions are correct. If you say "heed this", you are using heed as a verb. If you say "take heed", you are using heed as a noun, which accounts for the slight variation of wording. Use the one that sounds the best to you.
No, the constitution does not say "world 4 world" at any place in the text.
he feared strong federal governments and anything that the Constitution did not say they could do