iWriteGigs

Fresh Grad Lands Job as Real Estate Agent With Help from Professional Writers

People go to websites to get the information they desperately need.  They could be looking for an answer to a nagging question.  They might be looking for help in completing an important task.  For recent graduates, they might be looking for ways on how to prepare a comprehensive resume that can capture the attention of the hiring manager

Manush is a recent graduate from a prestigious university in California who is looking for a job opportunity as a real estate agent.  While he already has samples provided by his friends, he still feels something lacking in his resume.  Specifically, the he believes that his professional objective statement lacks focus and clarity. 

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In revising his resume, iwritegigs highlighted his soft skills such as his communication skills, ability to negotiate, patience and tactfulness.  In the professional experience part, our team added some skills that are aligned with the position he is applying for.

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“Kudos to the team for a job well done.  I am sincerely appreciative of the time and effort you gave on my resume.  You did not only help me land the job I had always been dreaming of but you also made me realize how important adding those specific keywords to my resume!  Cheers!

Manush’s story shows the importance of using powerful keywords to his resume in landing the job he wanted.

Chapter 2

Navigation   » List of Schools  »  California State University, Northridge  »  Political Science  »  POLS 155 – American Political Institutions  »  Fall 2021  »  Chapter 2

Need help with your exam preparation?

Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:

Question #1
A  by having a diversity of views
B  by decreasing political participation
C  by having fewer distinct groups in society
D  by limiting the sphere of government
Question #2
A  It creates an inability to experiment with different policy solutions.
B  Policy development is universalistic.
C  It results in highly inefficient policies.
D  Federal and state governments must share power.
Question #3
A  It promotes the division of labor within government.
B  It discourages separatism and secession.
C  It maintains local forms of representative government.
D  It hinders policy development and leads to budgetary inefficiency.
Question #4
A  It depends on state compliance.
B  It hinders policy development.
C  It limits oversight and accountability.
D  It provides more opportunities for political participation.
Question #5
A  He received pressure from Congress.
B  It was unconstitutional.
C  He became a states’ rights advocate.
D  He received pressure from state and local governments.
Question #6
A  the anti-Federalists
B  the Federalists
C  the suffragists
D  the Republican Party
Question #7
A  He believed that the federal government should play a significant role in the regulation of industry and transportation.
B  He believed that state power should be secondary to that of the federal government.
C  He endorsed unfunded mandates.
D  He believed that a federal system should limit the scope of government in order to protect civil liberties.
Question #8
A  They lead to the creation of fewer government agencies.
B  They tend to create stricter boundaries between states, counties, and towns.
C  They create the potential for more government oversight and new regulations.
D  They engender national disengagement from environmental protection efforts.
Question #9
A  The FCC used its power to regulate interstate commerce, as granted under the Commerce Clause, to effectively end the policy of net neutrality.
B  The FCC sued states that allowed internet service providers to discriminate across websites and web services.
C  Before the FCC ruling, state legislatures had passed their own legislation forbidding internet service providers from discriminating across web services.
D  The Trump administration enforced a ruling that prohibited internet service providers from discriminating across websites and web services.
Question #10
A  the Federal Aviation Administration
B  the Department of Transportation
C  the Federal Communications Commission
D  the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Question #11
A  coercive federalism
B  state sovereignty
C  dual federalism
D  unconstitutionality
Question #12
A  Public opinion must demand that leaders in Washington intervene.
B  State and local governments must request and approve emergency relief from the national government.
C  State and local governments must have depleted all their own resources to provide emergency services themselves.
D  The national government must deem emergency relief politically necessary.
Question #13
A  fewer government agencies
B  shifts in the balance of power toward the federal government
C  a shrinking of the executive branch
D  increased state power relative to the federal government
Question #14
A  Theodore Roosevelt
B  Harry Truman
C  Herbert Hoover
D  Franklin Roosevelt
Question #15
A  The states assumed greater responsibility over laws pertaining to civil liberties after the Civil War.
B  The philosophical debate between the states and the national government over economic freedom was resolved.
C  The national government assumed more power over significant governmental decisions and public policy after the Civil War.
D  The philosophical debate between the states and national government over equal rights was sorted out.
Question #16
A  It is characterized by a struggle to balance power between the federal and state governments.
B  It is characterized by a power struggle that has overwhelmingly favored the states.
C  The backlash from the states in response to growing national power has been greatly reduced.
D  The debate over the balance of power between the federal and state governments has largely been resolved.
Question #17
A  a commingling of national and state responsibilities
B  distinct policy jurisdictions between the federal and state governments
C  a steady increase in the power of state governments
D  a steady increase in the power of the federal government
Question #18
A  Opponents of the law felt that there was nothing wrong with the healthcare system in the United States.
B  Opponents of the law felt that the federal government had overstepped its authority.
C  Opponents of the law felt that the United States needed a nationwide single-payer healthcare system.
D  Opponents of the law felt that the reforms wouldn’t fix any of the problems with the healthcare system in the United States.
Question #19
A  It allowed insurance companies to discriminate against individuals with preexisting conditions.
B  It limited Medicaid coverage.
C  It mandated that all citizens have medical insurance.
D  It excluded children under 26 from their parents’ health insurance plans.
Question #20
A  devolution
B  grants-in-aid
C  dual federalism
D  unfunded mandates
Question #21
A  increasing the size of the federal government
B  decreasing the federal deficit
C  returning power to the states
D  maximizing the amount of unfunded mandates
Question #22
A  a block grant
B  cooperative federalism
C  dual federalism
D  an unfunded mandate
Question #23
A  through social programs aimed at increasing civil rights
B  through federal grants-in-aid
C  by threatening to remove funding from programs
D  by limiting the reach of the Commerce Clause
Question #24
A  national defense
B  voting rights
C  social
D  budgetary
Question #25
A  It resulted in a deepening of the Great Depression.
B  It lessened the power of the central government in relation to the power of the states.
C  It successfully installed extra judges on the Supreme Court.
D  It ushered in an era during which the powers of the federal government were protected by the Supreme Court.
Question #26
A  dual federalism
B  constitutional authority
C  states’ rights
D  the Commerce Clause
Question #27
A  expansion of executive power
B  a matter of national defense in the buildup to World War II
C  economic and financial
D  civil rights
Question #28
A  hiring bureaucrats to take over state and local governments
B  the use of grants-in-aid
C  creating federally funded public schools
D  creating new state and local programs
Question #29
A  the Necessary and Proper Clause
B  the Commerce Clause
C  the Supremacy Clause
D  the Full Faith and Credit Clause
Question #30
A  relatively high in comparison to the states
B  pertaining mainly to commerce, defense, and international trade
C  unlimited by the Supreme Court
D  working together with the states
Question #32
A  Net neutrality
B  grants-in-aid
C  Commerce Clause
D  international trade
Question #33
A  Seattle municipal laws regulating transportation
B  U.S. laws regulating controlled substances
C  Washington state laws regulating controlled substances
D  international drug-trafficking laws
Question #34
A  The waterways are patrolled by anti-drug vigilantes.
B  The waterways are regulated by the Washington State Police.
C  The waterways are regulated by federal agencies.
D  The waterways are notorious areas of piracy and lawlessness.
Question #35
A  health recommendations issued by the American Medical Association
B  local laws that make marijuana illegal
C  federal laws that make marijuana illegal
D  state regulations that prohibit marijuana in the workplace
Question #36
A  federalism
B  executive authority
C  civil rights
D  judicial review Incorrect
Question #37
A  State governments do not have power over the national government.
B  Maryland’s tax was not found to be unconstitutional.
C  The tax would have bankrupted the national government.
D  Taxes on all government-owned banks are unconstitutional.
Question #38
A  A sufficiently high tax could ensure that no institution could survive.
B  A federal income tax is an unconstitutional exercise of congressional power.
C  High taxes are unconstitutional because they violate private-property rights.
D  Taxes tend to hurt the poor more than they hurt businesses or the wealthy.
Question #39
A  Can a federal institution tax a state government?
B  Can a bank be owned by members of Congress?
C  Can a state tax a federal institution?
D  Can the federal government tax nonprofit organizations?
Question #40
A  The Supremacy Clause, in combination with the enumerated power of Congress to borrow money on the credit of the United States, gives Congress the implied power to establish banks in order to pay off war debts.
B  The power to charter a bank is an implied power of the president.
C  The power to charter a bank is an enumerated power of Congress.
D  The Necessary and Proper Clause, in combination with the enumerated power of Congress to regulate commerce and coin money, gives Congress the implied power to charter a national bank.
Question #41
A  Chartering banks was exclusively the province of state governments, according to the Constitution.
B  Chartering a bank was not among Congress’s enumerated powers.
C  Chartering a bank was not among Congress’s implied powers.
D  Chartering banks would lead to government corruption by allowing members of Congress undue influence over financial markets.
Question #42
A  in favor of Maryland
B  in favor of McCulloch
C  in favor of Philadelphia
D  in favor of state banks
Question #43
A  The federal government had previously taxed state banks excessively.
B  Anti-Federalists in the Maryland legislature wanted to test the limits of national power.
C  Maryland had a standing law that all banks would be taxed equally.
D  The United States started borrowing almost exclusively from the national bank instead of state banks.
Question #44
A  One of Congress’s enumerated powers under the Constitution is the authority to charter national banks.
B  State-owned banks were charging the federal government too much interest on loans to pay debts from the War of 1812.
C  State government officials requested that the federal government charter a national bank to lend states money.
D  State-owned banks had declared bankruptcy as a result of debt accumulated during the War of 1812.
Question #45
A  a state court ruling that conflicts with the Supreme Court ruling on same-sex marriage
B  a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulation that overrules a state court judgment involving food-safety labels
C  the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which allowed the federal government to monitor state-run elections
D  an amendment to a state constitution that establishes the right to religious freedom at the state level
Question #46
A  It limits Congress’s power by allowing Congress to pass only those laws that are “necessary and proper” for it to uphold and defend the principles in the Constitution.
B  It enhances the power of the states by allowing them to do whatever is “necessary and proper” to prevent Congress from overstepping its constitutional authority.
C  It expands Congress’s power by allowing Congress to pass any laws that are “necessary and proper” for it to carry out its enumerated powers under the Constitution.
D  It allows Congress to establish banks or other financial institutions as long as they are deemed “necessary and proper” for maintaining the stability of the nation’s economy.
Question #47
A  Some power has shifted back to the states.
B  The states are now more powerful than the federal government.
C  The federal government dominates the states more than ever before.
D  There has been no change in federalism since the mid-20th century.
Question #48
A  the House of Representatives
B  the Senate
C  the Supreme Court
D  the executive branch
Question #49
A  Local governments have assumed sole responsibility for domestic issues.
B  State governments share virtually none of the same powers as the federal government.
C  The federal government has progressively assumed greater responsibility for domestic and economic issues.
D  The debate surrounding the balance of power has almost completely disappeared.
Question #50
A  Southern states opposed the federal government while Northern states supported it.
B  States enjoyed their sovereignty from the federal government.
C  States felt that the federal government had far too much power over their affairs.
D  States wanted to abolish the federal government completely.
Question #51
A  the division of power between the three branches of government
B  a policy designed to enhance the power of the federal government
C  the division of power between the federal and state governments
D  the division of power between civilian and military leadership
Question #52
A  the executive branch
B  the growth of state power
C  the rising Confederacy
D  the abuse of political power
Question #53
A  Federalism primarily entails the growth of the federal government.
B  The Framers generally followed the model of federalism outlined in the Articles of Confederation.
C  Ensuring federalism was one of the easier tasks undertaken by the Framers of the Constitution.
D  Federalism was a subject of intense debate during the drafting of the Constitution.
Question #54
A  In a federal system, power shifts to the states to resolve their own public health problems.
B  In a federal system, neither the states nor the national government has the power to address public health issues.
C  In a federal system, the national government is the only government entity with the power to address matters of public health.
D  In a federal system, both states and the national government have powers that can affect the issues brought on by a public health crisis.