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    Chapter Three: American Federalism and Nationalism 1. What is the Necessary and Proper Clause? How has it been used to stretch the powers of the national government?  The constitutional declaration defines the Necessary and Proper Clause as Congress’s authority to exercise the “necessary and proper” powers to carry designated functions.  It is also known as elastic clause‚ because it includes all implied in the constitutional text. It has been used to stretch the power of the national government

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    Chapter 1 American Political Culture (Ginsberg) 1) In relationship to week’s 1 readings about how the government affects our life on a daily basis‚ discuss why does the general public accept governmental regulations and restrictions on our lives? For the first part of our short history‚ Americans did not accept the government’s right to regulate what individuals or business did. As a matter of fact‚ Americans greatly resisted any interference by government‚ especially the federal branch. The

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    AP Government September 7‚ 2012 Chapter 2 Summary Within the first pages of this chapter‚ we are introduced with the topic of the constitution and actions of Gregory Lee Johnson. The case of Gregory Lee Johnson is about that of him burning an American flag and protesting that when the government became involved‚ it was against his freedom of speech. This is where the constitution of the United States comes into play and supersedes the ordinary law. The question though‚ what exactly is a constitution

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    Murry’s “Chapter Four‚” “Chapter Five‚” and “Chapter Six” highlighted multiple events in the seventeenth century that indicated a shift in society. During this time‚ there was a variety of new ideas that were proposed regarding religion‚ science‚ politics‚ and philosophy. The only topic of these chapters that I had previously learned about or discussed was the Enlightenment‚ so many of these other events‚ ideas‚ and people’s reactions to them surprised me. “Chapter 4” discussed the relationship

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    third sub-division of chapter eight‚ pages one hundred and sixty-three through one hundred and sixty-nine. The section is explaining the time during the Mexican American War. The Anglo-Americans have begun to raid the Spanish settlements‚ stealing horses and declaring California separate from Mexico. After this troops moved into New Mexico‚ and Santa Fe taking them both with out any fighting. Months after these events Mexicans began to rebel against American rule. Americans then revolted in an act

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    CHAPTER 5 The American Revolution: From Elite Protest To Popular Revolt‚ 1763-1783 SUMMARY This chapter covers the years that saw the colonies emerge as an independent nation. The colonial rebellion began as a protest on the part of the gentry‚ but military victory required that thousands of ordinary men and women dedicate themselves to the ideals of republicanism. I. STRUCTURE OF COLONIAL SOCIETY In the period following the Seven Years’ War‚ Americans looked to the future with great optimism

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    Chapter 7: The Road to Revolution 1763-1775 The Deep Roots of Revolution The New World natured new ideas about government‚ citizen‚ and society unlike the Old World were they wouldn’t bother trying to change their social status. Republicanism‚ giving the stability of society and the authority of government to the citizens‚ and Whig ideas‚ defending against corruption of the representatives in parliament‚ were in the minds of the American Colonist by the mid-eighteenth century. Mercantilism and

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    Woo: The Joy Luck Club In this chapter we are introduced to the Joy Luck Club which originated all the way back in China when Jing-Mei Woo ’s mother Suyuan was in the city of Kweilin. At the Joy Luck Club a group of old Chinese women sit around and eat and after that they sit down in a table to play a friendly game of Mah-Jong. At the Joy Luck Club there are 4 major members‚ Lindo Jong‚ Ying-ying St. Clair‚ An-Mei Hsu‚ and Suyuan Woo. In the beginning of the chapter we learn that Suyuan has died and

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    THE AMERICAN STORY NOTES Chapter 1: Native Americans shared different views than the colonizers. (they wanted to bring colonization to North America) They did not agree on punishment of murder. (Europeans and Native Americans) The cultural superiority turned when -- Captain William Claiborne’s trading post in 1635‚ Maryland - Wicomess Indians (they were going to the trading post on business) encountered enemy Susquehannock Indians—they presented inappropriate behavior (making fun) in public

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    Chapter 19 vocabulary 1. Harriet Beecher Stowe - was an American abolitionist and author. Her novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin was a depiction of life for African-Americans under slavery; it reached millions as a novel and play 2. Uncle Tom’s Cabin - anti-slavery book which alarmed previously unconcerned Northerners and the rest of the world about slavery. 3. Hinton helper - book entitled ’Impending Crisis of the South’ that stirred trouble. Attempted to prove that indirectly the non-slaveholding

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