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Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 3061 - 3070 of 3135 matching essays
- 3061: The Uniqueness of the American Constitution
- ... forces of this country have no religious or denominational theme. Instead, the founding fathers made it clear that a government should function according to basic human decency and morale, not religion. A strict separation of church and government is declared in the Constitution. This is not to prevent holiness from entering politics, but to keep politics from entering holiness. Often times ...
- 3062: The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
- ... in cases of violation of civil liberties.(Websters) Civil liberties contain a substantial body of law including: freedom of speech and press, separation of church and state, free exercise of religion, due process of law, equal protection, and privacy.(Walker 3) The Encyclopedia of the Constitution defines civil liberties as "those rights that an individual citizens may assert against the government ...
- 3063: Censorship
- ... against the educational system, films, radio, television, and against the graphic and theatre arts. However or whenever these attacks occur, they usually fall at least one of the following categories: Religion War & Peace (Violence) Sociology & Race Language Drugs Sex Inappropriate Adolescent Behaviour What is Obscenity? Clearly something hard to talk about constructively. "Obscenity" is difficult to discuss honestly. After all, what ...
- 3064: Affirmative Action
- ... System Board of Regents adopted a plan to dismantle affirmative action plans within the university system. Effective January 1, 1997, the University of California system shall not use race, color, religion, sex, ethnicity, or national origin as a criterion for admission to the University or any program of study. The following is a brief excerpt from the resolution: The president shall ...
- 3065: The Four Political Parties of Canada
- ... and the reform element in the Maritimes came together gradually as the Liberal Party." (McMenemy, pg.10, 1976) In its early years, the Liberal Party reflected the various demographics of religion and geography among the voting public in Canada. With widespread support in Canada's rural areas several years after Confederation, "the Liberal Party opposed protectionism and supported commercial reciprocity with ...
- 3066: Whats Wrong With Communism
- ... profusely. This demonstrates another aspect of the Constitutional Democracy. A citizen is left to their own future. An American citizen also holds many rights true to him. Freedom of speech, religion, and the right to bear arms are just a few. Your country, on the other hand, is greatly hindered by your malignant ruling. A citizen owns virtually nothing he can ...
- 3067: The Corruption of Power
- ... things we say and do, and in many ways, limit our rights. The rights we are granted by the First Amendment of the Constitution, guarantee the basic freedoms of speech, religion, petition, press, and assembly. By exercising these rights, freedom can be discovered, and can also be costly. The corruption for power is a popular factor in the decay of American ...
- 3068: The Strategies The Meiji Government Used to Achieve Economic Development?
- ... the ideas of individual's exploration of knowledge but by 1890 the education system of Japan became a tool for indoctrination into what Peter Duus calls "a kind of civil religion" with the Imperial Rescript on Education. This Rescript stressed two things. First, it stressed loyalty to the emperor and to a lesser extant to the state. In every classroom a ...
- 3069: The Factors that Gave Rise To Japanese Militarism
- ... community organizations the public did little to protest. Shintoism provided a religious justification for nationalism and support for the militaristic government. Shintoism before the 1930's was primarily a nativistic religion which stressed nature and harmony. But during the 1930's it became a ideological weapon teaching Japanese that they were a superior country that had a right to expand and ...
- 3070: Imperialism: And the Way It Took Away Tranquillity
- ... power and enter into international politics. Second -- That our commercial interests around the world make it necessary for us to hold land permanently. Third -- That the spread of the Christian religion will be facilitated by a colonial policy. Fourth -- That there is no honorable retreat from the position which the nation has taken. The first argument is addressed to the nation ...
Search results 3061 - 3070 of 3135 matching essays
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