Those were the easiest questions I've ever answered. #1-Should at-least have questions on the 3 branches of the Gov.? (Executive, Legislative and Judicial.) #2-What are the age requirements and their term also for each? (So as for the House, age is 25 and to be elected for 2yrs, Senate's age is 30 and serve for 6 yrs, The president's age must be 35, also needs to be born on American soil, there he serves a 4yr term with the chance for 4 more years for a 8yr total.) #3- How many total members make up Congress? (There's 435 in House determined by the populations of the states, with 100 members in Senate, 2 Senators per state, 50 states, 535 total.) #4- How many stars is there on the flag? (50 total, one star for each state.) #5- How is the SCOTUS chosen and how long do they serve? (The Pres. nominates candidates when a justice either retires or dies, and then the Senate will interview and choose the best one to confirm to be supreme court justice to a life time appointment's.) #6- We are a 50 State "Constitutional __________?" Republic or Democracy #7- What years were the Revolutionary war and the Civil war's fought in? Rev.-1775-1783 and Civil-1861- 1865 #8- Who did we fight in each? Rev. was the Red Coats(Brits), Civil. was North (Union), and South (Confederates.) #9- What is the B-day for America? (July 4, 1776) #10- What is the Law of the Land? [The Constitution (Common law)] #11- When was the Declaration of Independence signed? (July 4, 1776) and who wrote it? (Thomas Jefferson wrote it and John Hancock was the first o sign it.) #12- Who wrote the Constitution? (James Madison wrote the Constitution with help from Alexander Hamilton and other's.) #13- (James Madison also wrote the Bill of Rights.) #14- What is the separations of power? #15- Who is- The top law enforcement officer? The Commander and Chief of the Military? Also who is the head of the Executive branch of the Government? The top diplomat for the country? (The President wears the hat for all four) #16- What is the Electoral College? Why does the electoral college regularly decide the Presidential elections, and not the popular vote! (It gives a voice to the less populated states to keep a strong Republic! We're not a democracy, we're a union of 50 individual sovereign states.) As together we're a more perfect union!
10/10 I came from an era in highschool where we were required to take a semester of both civics and government to graduate.
I am displeased to earn a score of 40%. I am foreign exchange from Lietuva and I dream of USA citizenship one of this days. Thank you for your lesson.
10 out of 10, I have been studying for naturalization for 2025.
9/10 Susan B Anthony threw me off lol!😅
7/10 bare minimum was what I got right.
Got them all right. Guess I can continue being a U.S. citizen.
I’m new in your channel, 01/05/2025 Blessings from San Diego California. 8:34 p:m pacific hour. Thank you for sharing this video, I’m learning every day.
10/10. this stuff is too easy. I got all of 'em correct.
10/10 practicing for my naturalization test later today!
Im in seventh grade but I got 7 right because I didn’t know Susan, what happens when the vice and president can’t serve, or what war Eisenhower was in
Hey.. You use to be so nice.. Lol I still use the magnet calendar and cold can thingy though😂
I got all of them right. This would be a crying shame however, I know a lot of people don’t know these answers, and it is a shame the lack of education that’s been going on the past 30 years
Answers to your questions: 1. California 2.The bill of rights 3: The President 4:100 5: because there were 13 original colonies 6:Mississippi River 7: 4 years 8: The speaker of the house 9: fought for women’s right 10: world war II ? I hope I got all correct answers
You said the questions to fast. I will have to come back later so I can write them down. I think (underline "think") I could pass this.
Ok I’m allowed to stay !!
My dad passes the test and he became a citizen of united states along time ago years ago when i was little
Hey @MHLaw!!! Hope you are doing good today! Will miss seeing you on RA.
As defined by the INA, all U.S. citizens are U.S. nationals but only a relatively small number of persons acquire U.S. nationality without becoming U.S. citizens. Section 101(a)(21) of the INA defines the term "national" as "a person owing permanent allegiance to a state." Section 101(a)(22) of the INA provides that the term "national of the United States" includes all U.S. citizens as well as persons who, though not citizens of the United States, owe permanent allegiance to the United States (non-citizen nationals).
@joegonzales3899