President BUSH: I said, yeah, we're going to enforce the laws in our country, just like you should enforce the laws in yours.
The bad guys in this are first and foremost the libel laws in the UK which have long been notorious for clamping down on the freedom of the press in that country.
FORBES: Video Game Journalist Robert Florence Leaves Eurogamer After Libel Complaints
The Republican alternative leaves the bank regulators in charge of the consumer laws -- the same regulators who have shown none or little interest in implementing these laws properly over the last series of years.
"The language in the laws against gambling aren't specific to physical dollars, " says Kane.
Public pressure after highly publicized rape cases led to amendments in the rape laws in 1983 and 2003.
The government bundled up before the fluted columns like an ice sculpture at a wedding--an impressive, preposterous construction molded to take one's mind off the reality that the in-laws loathe one another and that the formal wedding-cake couple will soon be sweating in the sheets.
Behind the controversy is a change not in the laws of war but in the means of waging it.
He also writes passionately about the role of symmetry in human perception and the arts, and the fundamental importance of symmetry in the laws of physics.
The resulting confusion has made the anomalies in the constitution, and in some laws, all the more glaring.
Local interpreters have told police that while the relevant legislation in Poland is similar to the laws in this country, it is not actively enforced.
Advocates of tougher bankruptcy laws reckon that the failure to tackle moral hazard is the main flaw in the current laws.
The securities laws enacted in the 1930s are, at their core, consumer protection laws designed to restore the faith in the market lost after the 1929 crash, and rely on disclosure and anti-fraud prohibitions to protect investors.
He opposed changes in the Sunday trading laws, and in November 1987 was the only Tory to oppose liberalisation of the licensing laws.
Romer was an equal-protection case while Lawrence was a privacy case, but in both of them the court applied the lowest level of scrutiny: It struck down the laws in question on the ground that disapproval of homosexuality was not even a "rational basis" for the laws under challenge.
Its unilateral move towards free trade began at the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 and culminated in the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846.
Of course, you don't need us to tell you just how many options are out there, but if your "best friend" (ahem) was looking to pick up an HD DVD player that packed plenty of features to please even the in-laws this holiday season, what's the unit to recommend?
ENGADGET: Ask Engadget HD: Which HD DVD player should I pick up for the holidays?
He is not universally liked in the army, but is regarded as preferable to one of the in-laws.
In the past, laws and rules in the agriculture industry have allowed DeCoster to operate in the background to hold off the kind of scrutiny he now faces.
Despite the number of mass shootings in the United States in 2012, Boston said he believes the laws already set in place for gun control are plenty.
CNN: Marine to senator: 'No ma'am,' I won't register my guns
Other trends highlighted in the report included large rises in Northern Ireland, which was put down to a relaxation in the licensing laws and growth of the leisure industry since the peace process began, and changes in children's drinking habits.
Supporters of the new government also say that it will try to make economic reform more palatable to Congress: whereas Mr Mahuad proposed the new exchange-rate regime as part of a package including telecoms and energy privatisation and changes in the labour laws, the new team may try to do things in stages.
The second would involve a single registry, probably in Guernsey as the necessary laws are already in place, with both islands again controlling the joint venture company.
However, the government may be forced to soften its stance and allow the debate of some of the controversial laws in the Peruvian congress.
Meanwhile, the Home Office said while more could always be done to keep children safe, the UK had "some of the toughest laws in the world".
James Forsyth, in the Spectator, says the speech may end up leaving the Conservatives "more deeply split" than at any time since the repeal of the Corn Laws in the 1840s.
This used the life of Alan Turing, a mathematical pioneer who broke the German Enigma codes and fathered the modern computer before running foul of the homosexuality laws in the 1950s, to examine how a man who had difficulty with ordinary human feeling devoted his life to creating a machine that could think and feel.
The truth is that 100% of the complexity inheres in the definition of taxable income, which takes up millions of words in the tax laws.
Quality has fluctuated too reaching its zenith in Beatrice Webb's minority report to the Royal Commission on the Poor Laws in 1909 (which first floated the idea of the National Health Service) and its nadir in the 1923 report of the Royal Commission on the Fire Brigades, where 10 of the 11 commissioners, including the chairman, signed one or more notes of dissent.
It comes pre-loaded with satellite navigation - apparently the next killer application for mobile - so there will be no excuses for getting lost on the way to the in-laws' Christmas party.
We homeschool our children, and Texas has the most liberal (in the old-fashioned sense) pro parent educational laws in the country.
应用推荐