Final answer:
It's true that strikes by public employees are outlawed in most states but still occur occasionally. Exercise 9.3.1 which claims that the necessary and proper clause limits national government power is false. Other exercises reveal truths and falsehoods about historical constitutions, the market revolution, women's suffrage, voting rates, and term limits on the representation of women in state legislatures.
Step-by-step explanation:
While strikes have been outlawed for most public employees, they still occur in some states. The answer to this statement is true. Public sector strikes are generally deemed illegal because they can disrupt vital public services, yet despite legal prohibitions, strikes by public employees do still happen in certain states. There is significant variation in law and practice from state to state.
Regarding the exercises provided:
The necessary and proper clause has expanded, not limited, the powers of the national government. So, Exercise 9.3.1 is false.
The market revolution significantly changed the social and economic structures of the United States, making the statement in Exercise 11.3.1 true.
Pennsylvania had a comparatively liberal constitution during the Revolutionary Era, not a conservative one, making the statement in Exercise 9.1.3 false.
No state constitution granted women the right to vote during the Revolutionary Era, making the statement in Exercise 9.1.4 and point 4 true.
The United States does not have higher voting rates than many democratic industrialized countries, so the statement in Exercise 5 is false.
There is no clear evidence that term limits have increased the number of women in state legislatures, rendering the statement in point 15 false.