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question #6
which of the following best describes the paradox of good government?
government needs to protect privacy but also needs to be able to maintain security for all
government can either be good or effective; it cannot be both good and effective at the same time
government is only as good as the people who make it up and as the people who vote for it
government needs to be strong to protect, but yet not interfere with the lives of the citizens
question #7
which of the following is the correct order of the branches of government as stated in the constitution?
legislative, executive, judicial
judicial, legislative, executive
executive, judicial, legislative
Question #6
A paradox of good government involves a conflicting need. The option "Government needs to be strong to protect, but yet not interfere with the lives of the citizens" shows the conflict between the need for a strong government (to protect) and the need to not overstep (not interfere), which is a paradox. The first option is about privacy vs security (more of a privacy - security paradox, not specific to good government's core paradox). The second option's "good or effective" is not a recognized paradox of good government. The third option is about the quality of people in government, not a paradox of the government's role.
In the U.S. Constitution, the order of the branches of government as established is Legislative (makes laws), then Executive (enforces laws), then Judicial (interprets laws). So the correct order is Legislative, Executive, Judicial.
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D. Government needs to be strong to protect, but yet not interfere with the lives of the citizens (assuming the options are labeled A - D with the first option as A, second as B, third as C, fourth as D)