Across
- 2. This Puritan governor called America "a city upon a hill" in a shipboard sermon in the 1630s | Picture fact, Page 7
- 3. The Puritans banned this religious group from Massachusetts, threatening to cut off ears and pierce tongues | Confused item, Page 14
- 4. More recent metaphor where every group retains its identity while contributing to the American whole | Bold term, Page 10
- 6. The idea that people have a tight bond and are responsible for one another, common in social democracies | Bold term, Page 5
- 7. This president wrote the Declaration of Independence and called the will of the majority a "sacred principle" | Quote, Page 3
- 9. Almost no nation in Europe or Asia offers this type of citizenship to every person born on its soil | Constitution fact, Page 13
- 10. The idea that individuals, not the government or community, are responsible for their own well-being | Bold term, Page 4
- 11. Church membership in America fell to this percent in 2021, the first time it dropped below half | Graph fact, Page 12
- 12. The old metaphor describing America as a society that boils away differences among its many people | Bold term, Page 9
Down
- 1. A system where government provides health insurance, retirement, and maternity benefits funded by high taxes | Bold term, Page 6
- 5. This post-Civil War addition to the Constitution gave citizenship to anyone born in the United States | Constitution fact, Page 8
- 8. According to a Pew Research table, this percentage of Americans say diversity makes their country better | Graph fact, Page 11
