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rahulcena rahulcena
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Posts: 364
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6 years ago
According to Article I of the Constitution, what are three areas of responsibility entrusted to the national government?
 
  a. write a mission statement, produce coinage, manage state operations
  b. appoint the president, regulate commerce between states, produce coinage
  c. write a mission statement, produce coinage, appoint the president
  d. produce coinage, regulate commerce between states, establish bankruptcy laws
  e. write a mission statement, manage state operations, establish bankruptcy laws

Question -2-

The central value of the American creed is __________.
 
  a. equality
  b. justice
  c. individualism
  d. property
  e. faith

Question -3-

Near v. Minnesota was the first case in which the Supreme Court established its position on which of the following?
 
  a. exclusionary rule
  b. due process clause
  c. prior restraint
  d. free exercise clause
  e. selective incorporation doctrine

Question -4-

Which of the following makes Americans American, according to the textbook?
 
  a. a long shared history
  b. a shared ethnic heritage
  c. a shared religion
  d. a shared set of beliefs
  e. a shared set of symbols and traditions

Question -5-

Why do politicians and journalists tend to seek simplistic answers to issues, while political scientists tend to see issues with more complexity? Provide an example to illustrate these differences.
 
  What will be an ideal response?
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Replies
wrote...
6 years ago
(Ans. #1)

d

(Ans. #2)

a

(Ans. #3)

c

(Ans. #4)

d

(Ans. #5)

An ideal response will:
1, Note that political scientists often see a world in which more than one factor contributes to an outcome. Thus, when trying to explain political outcomes, a political scientist is more likely to acknowledge a complex world with multiple contributing factors in a causal relationship. For example, a political scientist will not simply default to the simplest explanation, nor assume that a correlation between two events automatically means the existence of a causal relationship.
2, Discuss why politicians and journalists prefer simple explanations for political phenomena. For politicians and journalists, it is far easier, or politically beneficial, to simply explain events with a simple cause regardless of whether or not there is a causal relationship or other contributing factors. For politicians, explanations are often partisan in nature, ignoring information that does not comport with their political views.
3, Provide an example to illustrate these differences. For example, when trying to explain an election outcome, a political scientist might note a host of contributing factors that account for the election resultsthe state of the economy, incumbent advantages, public mood, or the quality of the campaigns. Pundits, journalists, and politicians may prefer simple explanations involving perhaps one of the above.
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