Men thought woman would become too masculine. ~courtney.
slavery and the states seceding. lincoln wanted the country to stay united but the south didnt and thats what started the whole thing then lincoln brought slavery into it and ended up ending slavery
Fundamental law of the U.S. federal system of government and a landmark document of the Western world. It is the oldest written national constitution in operation, completed in 1787 at the constitutional-conventionof 55 delegates who met in Philadelphia, ostensibly to amend the articles-of-confederation.
That a state had the right to ignore a law, if it thought the law was unconstitutional
who laid down the basic foundation for the science of genetics
Ha-ha I don't know.. listen to the teacher next time!
a basic conflict is a fight or argument
South Carolina's basic argument for nullification was that states had the right to declare federal laws unconstitutional and therefore null and void within their borders, as outlined in Thomas Jefferson and James Madison's Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions. They believed that the Constitution was a compact among the states and that states had the ultimate authority to determine the constitutionality of federal laws.
No, an argument cannot be void. An argument can be weak, flawed, or unconvincing, but it still retains its basic structure and content. A void argument would imply that there is no argument at all.
states rights
Their argument about money is not really about money, the basic situation is a power struggle.
The Quids believed that Jefferson was not true to their party's "country" ideology.
The premises of an argument are the statements or evidence put forward to support the conclusion. They are the basic building blocks upon which the argument is constructed.
it did not guarantee basic rights
it did not guarantee basic rights
The basic argument is religion, a long way second is who owns the land they are on.
There are particular components every sound argument must contain. The basic components are to state the claim, the grounds, qualifier, warrant, backing, and the rebuttal.