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Constitutional Implications of a Written and a Non-written Constitution

by Tymmy in Law, February 12, 2012
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The classification of constitutions into written and non-written constitutions has to do with the form in which the constitution appears. It refers to whether a constitution exists in tangible written form or it is just a collection of norms. A written constitution refers to one that exists in a document containing all the rules and principles that govern a state. On the other hand, a non-written constitution is one in which the rules and principles that govern a state are not contained in a single document called the constitution.

Federal Reserve: Vault of Evil

by Timotheus in Government, September 8, 2010
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The high priests of currency use currents of power to manipulate the United States through financial subterfuge. The Great Depression and the current Depression were artificially created by this international cartel of financial fascism.

Close the Window of Opportunity: Perverse Police Profiling and Selective Law Enforcement

by Artie Comstock in Issues, March 11, 2009
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Selective Law Enforcement opens a window of opportunity for police to engage in illegal profiling of individuals, in violation of Fourth Amendment principles. It is time to close that window in American policing tactics.

It’s Only a Word, Right?

by Lowrie Fawley in Issues, March 8, 2009
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Religious conservatives in California are bitterly fighting to uphold Proposition 8’s ruling to define “marriage” as existing solely between a man and a woman. They are not fighting about rights, only about semantics. If that’s the case, what harm is done by letting them have their way?

Political Science 3

by B3K4.delphia in Law, April 12, 2008
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In any system, there are always people bending the rules or trying to change them. For this reason, laws and courts are set up in the government.

The Sherman Act of 1890

by Carlotta M Ruiz-Smith in Law, November 11, 2007
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The Standard Oil Company of Ohio had attained control of nearly all the oil refineries in the U.S. The company almost immediately began using a variety of cutthroat techniques to acquire or destroy competitors and thereby “consolidate” the industry.

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