Who wants a candy?

<p>Alright can some answer these questions:</p>

<li><p>The branch of Govt. resonsible for the “implementation of laws” is the executive or legislative? I think its legislative but my book sounds too kunfuzing.</p></li>
<li><p>The Supreme Court in Plessy vs. Ferguson voted _______ in favor of seperate but equal. Is it unanimous or integration?</p></li>
</ol>

<p>Also who "established" the cabinet system? I know the President appoints members to his cabinet so does that mean he est. it as well, and George Washington was the first to do so?</p>

<p>Why don't you research the answer yourself? This candy tastes like s***!</p>

<p>wikipedia is good for this but i'll help you out.
the legislative branch makes the laws the executive "executes" them or, enforces/implements them,...i.e. creating an agency and so on.</p>

<p>look up plessy vs ferguson on wikipedia, unanimous means they all voted in one way.</p>

<p>george washington established cabinet offices, the constitution says that, "the president shall appoint officers to be approved by the senate" but Washington was the first to create a cabinet (thus setting the basics for the executive branch for 200 years). He appointed a secretary of war, state, and treasury (i think).</p>

<p>Thanks punkdudeus, despite MY RESEARCH AND INTENSIVE CHAPTER REVIEW, your clarification really helped. And I believe Plessy vs. Ferguson overruled the ruling therefore establishing integration and ending segregation after Brown vs. Board of Education:)</p>

<p>its the opposite....plessy started integration and brown v board ended it...it should not be hard at all to find on wiki theyre 2 of the most famous court cases in history</p>

<p>plessy didn't start integration, the Court ruled that under the 14th amendment, schools can be SEPARATE (segragated) and Equal. Brown vs. BOE ruled that separate is inherently unequal and is therefore a violation of the 14th amendment (that all citizens are equal before the law)</p>

<p>Plessy definately did not START integration. Quite the opposite, Plessy established the legality of segregation.</p>

<p>However, the other option, unanimous, isn't correct either (I don't think). I'm pretty sure Plessy was a 7 - 2 decision? I could be wrong on this, although I don't think so. I also think Plessy was BEFORE Brown, wasn't Brown in like the 1950's, while Plessy was MUCH earlier?</p>

<p>brown was in the 50's, plessy in the late 1800's</p>