New York delegate Alexander Hamilton was born on Nevis, an island in the British West Indies.
Technically, all of the signers were born in a country other than the United States, as it did not exist until it was signed.
The original document has been lost, so we will never know.
The present Louisiana constitution follows the federal constitution more closely than any of earlier states constitution
the origional constitution is superior to any ammendment
Presidents are NOT allowed to interpret the constitution and they are the Commander in Chief of the military. To use the military they need permission of Congress and can't just put them somewhere. The Sec. of State is the principal person involved with foreign policy and any treaties have to be approved by Congress before they go into effect. The constitution provides for a system of checks and balances to make sure no branch is more powerful than another. The president is not a king deciding issues alone.
A meeting with a foreign leader usually does not have any great meaning.
none
The Constitution was signed in 1787. Pittsburgh was still a small town in the far western edge of the known area of the continent.
false
To get a Florida birth certificate (or a birth certificate in any other state, for that matter), the child had to have been born in Florida.
No
10th Amendment
The US is a major world power (probably the biggest) and effects on its governing will effect the world. The US's policies are affected by the constitution, parts of the constitution that relate to foreign policy will effect any countries that deal with the US (which is almost every country).
No. The Constitution prohibits any state from making foreign treaties, printing paper money, or having standing armies.
It does not now, and any change would require a Constitutional Amendment.
foreign countries are prohibited to plant any nuclear weapon or even to try their weapons to our country because it can harm our environment..
The original document has been lost, so we will never know.
There were no Foreign Powers