First Lady of the United States

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    Anything the people did not ratify, isn’t the law.” (Strauss, 37) The Constitution, as is, has had many years to be created and improved. It is what has blurred state lines and truly brought our country together into the United States. With that, any laws that are proposed should be contained within the perimeters of the laws already made. The laws in the Constitution should not contradict each other but agree. The Constitution was made for a reason…

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    Has your fraternity or sorority been accused of hazing, or have you been targeted personally for criminal charges involving hazing? If this has happened, you need to seek legal counsel and avoid making any statements to police or campus authorities. Stop all contact with the accuser and find a legal professional that has dealt with hazing cases in the past. You don’t want to face criminal charges or end up sacrificing your education and getting kicked out of school because of the accused crime,…

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    Good Samaritan Rule

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    United of States has a law commonly known as the Good Samaritan rule that is dominant in the US and is generally designed to protect people from harm by any omission or negligent act that results while providing voluntary assistance to others in a medical emergency. The nature and scope of immunity of such laws varies jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Legislation in some states offer immunity only to doctors, while other states extend the immunity to emergency medical personnel, police and…

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    This essay will be based on the argument of whether religious student clubs should be allowed in public schools. EAA rules/ Amendments say that private schools can only have religious clubs unless one rule is met. This rule is it has to have federal funding, meaning the government pays for it. Religious clubs in public schools is a big issue. Students can use this knowledge for good or bad. They can use it to inform others and practice or they can just laugh at the practices. Public schools…

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    Facts: In 2008, Landon Wynar, a sophomore at Douglas High School in Minden, Nevada exchanged several instant messages using MySpace social media with his classmates from his home computer. Wynar bragged about having an arsenal of weapons and threatened to shoot and kill several classmates on the anniversary of the Columbine School Massacre. Wynar also bragged he would kill more students than those who died at Virginia Tech, which at the time was the deadliest school shooting on record.…

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    Throughout the history of the United States, much has been accomplished through American citizens exercising their constitutional rights. There are cases of great leaders, such as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who led peaceful protests against laws and policies that were both unfair and unconstitutional. King was able to unite people and successfully end laws that were unjust. While there are great examples of those who peacefully exercised their rights to assembly and free speech, there were…

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    intentions to stay away from religion, creating a “wall of separation” between the federal government and the state government, giving the state government full responsibility with religious affairs. Jefferson’s phrase possibly meant that there should be a clear division between religion and publicities. Daniel Dreisbach made many arguments in “The Mythical Wall of Separation.” One of them states that “the judiciary has embraced this figurative phrase [wall of separation…

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    The Sedition Acts of 1798, also known as Alien and Sedition Acts, established a controversial stand point of the people. This act was passed by the Federalists and signed into by President John Adams. At the time, Federalists and Republicans were of the opposite opinions. The purpose of this act was for the Federalists to gain control and limit the power of the Republican party. According to the History.com Staff (2009), “…the Sedition Act imposed harsh penalties on anyone found guilty of making…

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    contributed to the document's message claim that Chief Justice Earl Warren's decision in the Brown v. Board of Education was unconstitutional on many grounds. Firstly, the authors state that the Supreme Court's decision is "a clear abuse of judicial power" as the court exercises dangerously "unlimited power" over Southern states as an outside force, unjustly disintegrating "the established law of the land"(www.americanradioworks.publicradio.org, par. 2, 3, and 11). As the Southern leaders…

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    Allegiance, then a non-denominational prayer in which students were to recognize their independence upon God. Then, in 1962, a parent sued on behalf of his child, arguing that the law violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, as made applicable to the states through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The case was moved all the way to the Supreme Court, which resulted in a six to one vote in favor of the plaintiff. The judges stated that the school could not force…

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