Yeah, the title could have easily just been: "Supreme Court upholds ban on emergency abortions in Texas" and it would be way clearer
Honest question: how does this work for corporations? Does that mean a particular employee of a corporation holds the copyright, or can the corporation itself (e.g. Disney) as a legal "person" hold a copyright?
In my Kroger store there's just one aisle with a big tv to remind you that you're on camera... The aisle with diapers and baby food.
Just guessing but:
- He's gay and that might turn off some swing voters especially people who are already hesitant about having a black woman at the top of the ticket
- He's never won any election beyond a municipal one, so he may be seen as electorally untested.
- His resume is a bit thin with just his time as a mayor of a small town and time as the transportation secretary.
Russia?
It also diminishes the political power of regions where there are more undocumented immigrants by giving them less representation in the House
I love it. It's like a dollar store Dali knock off.
Yeah, OP should take this as a opportunity to work on assignment design and course policies for the next time. There have been plenty of times where students did something that I viewed or suspected as dishonest but didn't report them for it because I hadn't designed my assignments well or didn't have a clear policy against it.
I went to a hipster restaurant about a decade ago where they served fries with a shot glass full of chocolate milk shake on the side for dunking. It was really tasty ngl
Except french fries
In the Republic, it basically goes: aristocracy (of philosophers) -> aristocracy (of warriors) -> oligarchy -> democracy -> tyranny