|
|
|
|
Canada's Copyright Law
... and bingo you have a new tape. You also
just broke the law.
Along with copying audio tapes, now we can copy video tapes almost
as easily. If you hook two VCR's together, they can copy from one to the
other. You could rent a movie form the video store, copy and return it,
with no one the wiser.
The problem with copying video and audio tapes is that for every
copy you make the recording artist, the actors, producers and everyone
else who collect royalties from the tapes lose money. If the companies
start to lose money, they raise prices. Thus a vicious circle begins. As
prices go up, fewer people buy original copies. If less people buy the ...
|
"Legalization Of Marijuana"
... appetite, and a sensation of dryness in the throat." (A.P.E. L to M 193). These "hippies" fought to legalize it. Groups such as the major one, "N.O.R.M.A.L." formed to fight for the right to smoke marijuana. Protests were formed and marches and festivals were held. On the other side of this was the government cracking down and forming new laws to keep it illegal. In the 1980’s the fight to legalize marijuana was decreased, but the groups like "N.O.R.M.A.L." were still around. Although the people weren’t so strong-willed to legalize it they still fought. New and harder drugs were now popular and marijuana wasn’t as "popular." In the early 1990’s the d ...
|
Corruption In The NYPD
... legal body to oversee NYPD's Internal
Affairs Division and even launch independent investigations. However, mayor
Giuliani and police commissioner Bratton are oppose to the plan, and refuse
to give up authority to outsiders. Mollen stated that, " what we did find
shocking was a total ineptitude of police fighting corruption, they are
superb in fighting crime-except among themselves." Corruption is the
product of individual police officer and police environment, and its
control must mainly should come from the department.
Any number of elements or combination of things can influence the
behavior of an organization. Within the police department ; the
organ ...
|
Power Does Not Come From A Gun
... who could make such a
statement.
Martin Luther King Jr. once said, "If a man hasn't found
something he will die for, he isn't fit to live." A leader in the
Black community and the recipient of the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize,
King's accomplishment of attaining civil rights for Blacks was a
great one, but the road to achievement was long and full of
sacrifices. It was a time when Blacks had no rights and most of
them accepted this as the way it was and no one could do anything
about it. Most of them, but ...
|
Capital Punishment: Pros
... In
order for capital punishment to work as a deterrence, certain events must
be present in the criminal's mind prior to committing the offence. The
criminal must be aware that others have been punished in the past for the
offence that he or she is planning, and that what happened to another
individual who committed this offence, can also happen to me.
But individuals who commit any types of crime ranging from auto theft
to 1st-Degree Murder, never take into account the consequences of their
actions. Deterrence to crime, is rooted in the individuals themselves.
Every human has a personal set of conduct. How much they will and will not
tolerate. How far they ...
|
The Two Different Cases Regarding Capital Punishment
... to belong to a community is not unconditional. The
privilege of living and pursuing the good life in society is not certain.
The essential reason on which community is built requires each citizen to
honor the rightful claims of others. The precious live in a moral
community must be so highly honored that those who do not honor the life of
others void their own right to membership. Those who violate the
personhood of others, especially if this is done persistently as a habit
must pay the ultimate price. This must be done for the sake of the
community which was violated. We can debate whether some non-lethal
alternative is a suitable substitute for the death ...
|
Legalization Of Drugs
... commit 50 to 100 serious crimes, including robbery, rape, and murder, per year when on the loose. For the first time in years, our overcrowded prisons will have room for them. Ultimately, legalization will open 75,000 jail cells. Of 31,346 sentenced prisoners in federal institutions, those in for drug law violations were the largest single category, of 9,487. Forty states are under court orders for overcrowding. Funds are not available to build prisons fast enough to provide the needed space. Violent criminals are being paroled early or are having their sentences chopped to make space for drug users and dealers.
Legalizing drugs would immediately relieve the press ...
|
Marijuana
... the prohibition, marijuana was widely used because of the scarcity of
alcohol. Prohibition was repealed after just thirteen years while the
prohibition against marijuana lasted for more than seventy five years. This
double standard may have resulted from the wishes of those in power. Alcohol
prohibition struck directly at tens of millions of Americans of all ages,
including many of societies most powerful members. Marijuana prohibition
threatened far fewer Americans, and they had relatively little influence in the
districts of power. Only the prohibition of marijuana, which some sixty million
Americans have violated since 1965 has come clo ...
|
Child Abuse
... their all grown up. If you talk to the child when their younger and let them get what happened out and known that their not the one that did something wrong. When you let them get all their emotions out the chances of them having depression or any other disorder in the future, is much less then a person who doesn’t talk to anybody about it.
One type of is the shaking child syndrome. This is when you shake the baby forcefully usually by the shoulders causing the blood vessels that bridge the brain and skull to tear. This could lead to seizures, lethargy, vomiting and irritability and eye injuries, extreme cases could lead to coma or even death. You don’t have to b ...
|
Censorship In The United States
... us in the glorious first ten amendments to the Constitution—the Bill of Rights.
Somewhere along the line, someone got the idea that Americans are not smart enough to view “questionable” and “objectionable” material. We are being told what we can and can not see and that is a travesty. Government organizations, such as the FCC, routinely and systematically >subjugate and suppress the freedoms that we have to express ourselves as >backed by the Bill of Rights. They edit radio broadcasts, place “black-bars” over televised images, and even try to refine works of literature so that they meet certain “standards.” As US citizens, we should be appalled that such practices a ...
|
Browse:
« prev
29
30
31
32
33
more »
|
|
|