Supreme Court of the United States

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    The U. S. Const. amend. II states, “[a] well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.” [1] It is argued that the Constitution provides individuals the right to ownership and possession of a wide variety of weapons to use as protection. Others argue the right is not a fundamental right of the people and belongs to the states to protect and maintain organized militia units and public forces. This is…

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    The information contained in Becoming Justice Blackmun demonstrates the forcible, yet changeable, as a matter of law, nature of precedent with regards to the penetration of the lives of the United States citizenry. Most prominently cited, the Roe v. Wade decision, altered the age-old belief of the criminalization of abortion. Blackmun wrote in his notes, “‘Here we go in the abortion field” (Greenhouse, 72), prior to the hearings of three cases involving abortion; thus, Blackmun, as well as the…

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    system is a democratic constitutional monarchy, consisting of a monarch and a prime minister. The United States of America however, is a federal republic with a separation of power between three branches. Beyond these two key differences, the two countries have political similarities such as a dual-chamber, two dominating political parties as well as scheduled elections. Firstly, the United States of America has a political system based on federalism, whereas Britain is a constitutional…

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    If you go out and about within our country and you ask people if they knew very much about the United States court system, they will most likely tell you that they do not know very much about the court system unless they have been involved with the court system whether it be federal or state level. Most people do not realize that the court systems have three levels within them or that there is certain situation that will allow you to get to one level or the other. There is a whole lot of…

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    rejected the idea that the bills were to be set in the original 1787 Constitution. The Bill of Rights were heavily used by the Anti-Federalists as a point to argue in the favor of pre- constitutional status quo, confederation of the independent states, and operating under the glorified treaty of the articles of confederation. What is the purpose of the bill of rights? The main purpose of the U.s bill of rights is to define the civil liberties of the American citizens, this refers to the first…

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    is one of the most important cases in the Supreme Court because it had been declared the power of judicial review. In 1803, William Marbury had decided there would be a justice of the peace for the District of Colombia in the last hours of the Adams organization. Marbury, with three other individuals, requesting a writ of mandamus. Thomas Jefferson's Secretary of State, James Madison, had declined Marbury's commission. A writ of mandamus is a specific court order because it is made without the…

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    fundamental law, which is superior to any state statute, and as a limited Constitution. In Federalist Paper Number 78, Hamilton argues that the Supreme Court should have the authority to invalidate acts of Congress that are deemed unconstitutional, and that if there is a variance between the Constitution and a law passed by Congress, federal courts have the responsibility to follow the Constitution. Paper Number 78, having been cited in thirty-seven Supreme Court opinions as of April 2007, has…

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    Therefore, in 1803 Marbury made an appealed to the Supreme Court to have his commission honored. The following President Thomas Jefferson did not believe that the Supreme Court could intervene and that the commission should not be granted. Chief Justice John Marshall had three questions in regards to the appeal (McBride, 2006). Did Marbury have a right to petition the court, did the law of the land have the right to make a decision, and finely did Supreme Court have that right to make the…

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    definition-of-marriage cases before the U.S. Supreme Court?” It’s a fair question I have been asked since the Supreme Court announced Dec. 7 it would hear two marriage-definition cases, potentially setting the stage for a landmark ruling in June. Simply put, my legal obligation as attorney for my client, the Indiana legislature, is to defend state laws legislators have passed. Indiana has a statute defining marriage as between a man and a woman. If the Supreme Court were to strike down a…

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    The first and the far most important Supreme court decision was Marbury v. Madison of 1803. Marbury v. Madison was written by the chief justice John Marshall and was the first supreme court case to put in application the concept of Judicial review. It began with the election of 1800; Federalist Party of John Adams viruses the Republican Party of Thomas Jefferson. Upon the defeat of John Adams, on the last days in office, Adams appointed a large number of Justices of peace for Washington D.C and…

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