Silly arguments on illegal immigrationDave Gorak
But a more meaningful prize might be on the horizon: After Cannes, government officials emailed Sangare, inviting him to renew his residency application. Responding to AP questions, French authorities said the deportation order against Sangare “remains legally in force” but...
The violation, in that case, is that tall people (and those who discriminate against them) have a different legal status from specific ethnic groups (and those who discriminate against them). If there was simply a law against all shops discriminating against any customers, then that would be ...
financed education and social services to illegal immigrants. It is now in the courts. The measure’s educational provisions conflict with a 1982 U.S. Supreme Court decision that overturned a Texas law against public schooling of illegal immigrant children. The articles here give different views ...
“Private prisons should be abolished,” explains doctoral student Holly Genovese. “But if the problem is the profit—institutions unjustly benefiting from the labor of incarcerated people—the fight against private prisons is only a beginning. Political figures and others serious about fighting injusti...
“the science and engineering of making intelligent machines.” He later created the computer programming languageLISP(which is still used in AI), hosted computer chess games against human Russian opponents, and developed the first computer with “hand-eye” capability, all important building blocks ...
“the science and engineering of making intelligent machines.” He later created the computer programming languageLISP(which is still used in AI), hosted computer chess games against human Russian opponents, and developed the first computer with “hand-eye” capability, all important building blocks ...
“our own Defence, against a foreign Enemy.” The English writer and MP Soame Jenyns also justified the removal of gun restrictions to further the establishment of a national militia. Although “Accidents [such as murder] may sometimes happen,” it did not matter, he argued, because “every ...