Citizenship Stuff
Historical Influences
Road to the Constitution
Constitution part 1
Constitution part 2
100

Birthright Citizenship..The 2 options

Law of Blood, Law of Soil

100

The 2 ancient civilizations that influenced our founding fathers

Ancient Greece 

Ancient Rome

100

British policies led the colonists to say these 4 words to the king..

"No Taxation Without Representation"

100
The two groups who argued about the US Constitution

Federalists (for it) & Anti-Federalists (against)

100
The 3 branches of government

Legislative, Executive, Judicial

200

The final step in becoming naturalized

Take the oath of allegiance

200

Any 1 influence of Judeo-Christian tradition on our founding fathers

Ethical ideas of justice, individual worth, rule of law, taking personal responsibility for actions

200

This 1st "rule book" for the United States was Terrible!

The Articles of Confederation

200

This part of the Constitution introduces the goals and purposes of our government

The Preamble

200

These powers are like an elastic rubber band stretching

"Implied" powers as listed in the necessary and proper clause

300

Steps to become naturalized (name a few)

Be at least 18, lawful permanent resident, 5+ years in US, Good character

Apply, English and government tests

Take oath of allegiance

300
The enlightenment philosopher who created the social contract

John Locke

300

The Declaration of Independence described what to the King of England (describe any one idea)? 

Why we were breaking up, Natural rights violations, the social contract, grievances

300

The difference between Separation of Power vs. Checks & Balances

Separation into 3 branches with their own jobs, vs. How each branch can "check" or stop another branch's actions

300

The process of changing the Constitution to keep up with the times..

Amendment process

400

When does the "Common good" suffer? 

If citizens ignore the "should-do's"

If citizens ignore The "R"s in DO.o.R

400

How Montesquieu's ideas are seen today in the US Government

We have a legislative, executive and judicial branch that separates power into 3 equal branches

400
Any two of the principles (ideas) in America's early founding documents..

Rule of law, natural rights, limited government, due process, equality of mankind, religious liberty

400
This branch has the enumerated power to regulate immigration and declare war
Congress/Legislative Branch
400

Two examples of The legislative branch "checking" the executive branch

Impeachment, ratify treaties, approve presidential apppointments (picks for jobs)

500

2 of the "must do's" and 

3 of the "Should do's" of Citizens

Must: Obey Laws, Pay Taxes, Jury Duty, Selective Service

Should: Vote, Petition, Civic meetings, Community service, run for office, be informed

500

All 4 of the influential documents we learned

Magna Carta, Mayflower Compact, English Bill of Rights, "Common Sense" 

500

Three reasons why the "Articles of Confederation" was a terrible rule book!

No power to tax, no power to regulate trade, tough to get changes made, no national courts, no executive branch or President

500

The meaning of insure domestic tranquility (as listed in the Preamble)

Keep peace inside the united states

500

Name 2 of the President's many roles

Chief.... Exectutive, Diplomat, Legislator, Economist

Commander in chief, head of state, party leader

M
e
n
u