Zac Harrison helps Atlantans live off the land

The town was small, and old, and poor. The streets were unpaved, and the buildings were falling apart. A small, old, poor town with unpaved streets and falling-apart buildings.

The United States Constitution is supreme law in the United States of America. The Constitution originally consisting of seven articles defines the framework for national government. The first three articles of the Constitution embody the doctrine that the federal government has three branches, namely the executive (the President), the legislative (the bicameral Congress) and the judicial (the Supreme Court and federal courts). The concepts of federalism are embodied in Articles IV, V, and VI, which describe the rights and responsibilities that state governments have with respect to the federal government. The thirteen States ratified the Constitution using the procedures outlined in Article VII. The Constitution originally comprised seven articles that defined the framework of national government. The first three articles of the Constitution embody the doctrine that the federal government has three branches, the legislative (the bicameral Congress), the executive (the President) and the judicial (the Supreme Court and other federal court).