Using occupations, education and income, and race and gender, discuss they ways in which Congress does or does not meet the expectations of descriptive representation.
What will be an ideal response?
Americans in general are employed in a wide variety of skilled and semiskilled occupations. They work in the service economy, sales, management, and as clerical workers. Conversely, lawyers, businesspeople, and politicians dominate Congress from an occupational point of view. Republicans typically draw most of their numbers from business and banking while Democrats tend to come more from a public service background. Educationally speaking, 39.4 percent of the American population holds a two- or four-year college degree while only 12.9 percent have advanced degrees. On the other hand, more than 75 percent of Congress have advanced degrees. Their income is well above the American average, with many members of both houses holding millionaire status. As with occupations, from an education and income point of view, Congress does not reflect the public at large. As to race and gender, women and minorities have not historically been well represented, although they are both better represented today. It was not until the civil rights movement of the 1960s that blacks or Hispanics attained any measure of meaningful representation. In the 1990s representation for blacks, women and Hispanics all began to improve
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Indicate whether the statement is true or false
There were many reasons, but the underlying issue behind the Gulf War was ________
a. Saddam Hussein's desire to prevent the spread of an Islamic Revolution b. Saddam Hussein's desire to become the regional superpower c. Kuwait's desire to separate from Iraq's Basra province d. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia's insistence that Iraq pay back loans taken out to defeat Iran e. Kuwait pumping too much oil from the Rumaila oilfield and driving down world oil