The legal reason is that Article 1, Section 10 states: "No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance or Confederation. . ." The reason this is in the Constitution is that the United States as a country must be the only entity to treat with other countries. If the states had the right to enter into treaties with other countries, there could be conflicting treaties with the same foreign country.
False, states are not allowed to print money
enter treaties coin money issue bills of credit grant titles of nobility tell lies
If this comment is pertaining to the states in the United States of America, it is incorrect. Coining money and making treaties with foreign countries is one of the specifically enumerated duties listed in to Constitution of the United States that are solely controled by the federal government in Washington, DC
Yes
State governments within the United States cannot declare war, make treaties, print money or mint coins.
States cannot declare war or enter into treaties with other countries, as those powers are reserved for the federal government. Additionally, states cannot coin their own money or infringe on the rights protected by the U.S. Constitution.
They are prohibited from coining their own money, and from making treaties with foreign powers.
No State shall: - Enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation - Grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal - Coin Money - Emit Bills of Credit - Make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts
States are not allowed to print money because the economy falls under the national government. If every state printed its own money, it wouldn't be worth the same from state to state.
According to section 10 of the United States Constitution, states may not coin money, enter into treaties with foreign governments, grant titles of nobility, pass any ex post facto law, or impair the obligation of contracts.
They are prohibited from coining their own money, and from making treaties with foreign powers.
They had limited powers. They could make coins, borrow money, make treaties with other countries and the Indians, settle conflicts between the states, and they could ASK states for money and soldiers, but they could not force the states to give money or soldiers, even in an emergency.