As described by Howard and Donnelly, Michael Walzer presents
a. a strong defense of the morality of the general international principle of nonintervention.
b. a strong argument that there can be no moral justification for remedial international action.
c. a strong defense of the morality of the general international principle of intervention for the sake of preventing human rights abuses.
d. an argument against any international intervention for the sake of human rights, even when there are gross violations of human rights.
e. a case for using morality as the chief reason for the violation of national sovereignty and that such a threshold for violation should be held relatively low to prevent undue suffering.
Answer: a
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______ was a social movement that promoted the communal values of the worker class.
Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).
Merely being a taxpayer and being opposed to a law does not provide the standing necessary to challenge that law in court except in cases pertaining to
A) taxation. B) governmental support for religion. C) environmental protection. D) civil liberties. E) racial or sexual discrimination.