| Amount of texts to »Law« |
34, and there are 34 texts (100.00%)
with a rating above the adjusted level
(-3) |
| Average lenght of texts
|
144 Characters |
| Average Rating |
1.265 points, 8 Not rated texts |
| First text |
on Apr 17th 2000, 18:54:30 wrote Justice_OConnor
about Law |
| Latest text |
on Nov 26th 2012, 23:58:32 wrote vty
about Law |
Some texts that have not been rated at all
(overall: 8) |
on May 20th 2007, 12:12:56 wrote ugly duckling about Law
on Apr 20th 2001, 15:24:07 wrote Joe about Law
on Nov 26th 2012, 23:58:32 wrote vty about Law
|
Random associativity, rated above-average positively
Texts to »Law«
Justice_OConnor wrote on Apr 17th 2000, 18:54:30 about
Law
Rating: 21 point(s) |
Read and rate text individually
Law is inherently based on faith. One must have faith that the legislature has the power to make the law, the people and police will follow the law, the courts will honestly interpret the law. If this breaks down, you must have faith that society has enough at stake to continue to work for justice.
The Heretic wrote on Jul 28th 2000, 08:42:56 about
Law
Rating: 6 point(s) |
Read and rate text individually
Law is not the ink or the paper it is written on, but the human concept of what is right. There is now way to escape law. It is omnipresent simply because it exists not as a tangible element but as an intangible concept.
Ralph wrote on Nov 29th 2002, 02:49:45 about
Law
Rating: 3 point(s) |
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The Law is just an Anagram of Wealth, Anne Clark says. But is this right or is this wrong? To the marxists, this should be true in a capitalist society. But I do not share the marxists´s point of view.
dan b pearl wrote on May 8th 2000, 12:48:35 about
Law
Rating: 3 point(s) |
Read and rate text individually
"[S]ome persons believe they have the power to
predict what has not yet come to pass; when such
persons impart their belief to others, they are
not acting fraudulently; they are expressing
opinions which, however dubious, are unquestionably protected by the Constitution."
California Supreme Court ruling, 1984
dan b pearl wrote on May 8th 2000, 13:07:34 about
Law
Rating: 1 point(s) |
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»[T]he business of fortune-telling is inherently fraudulent... its regulation or prohibition is required to protect the gullible, superstitious or unwary.«
California Supreme Court ruling, 1976
»[S]ome persons believe they have the power to predict what has not yet come to pass; when such persons impart their belief to others, they are not acting fraudulently; they are expressing opinions which, however dubious, are unquestionably protected by the Constitution.«
California Supreme Court ruling, 1984
| Some random keywords |
bravery
Created on Aug 17th 2004, 11:21:43 by Joe, contains 4 texts
independent
Created on Dec 15th 2000, 13:37:09 by van daale, contains 15 texts
nonsensical
Created on Oct 27th 2001, 20:18:44 by Together, contains 11 texts
headache
Created on Mar 2nd 2005, 22:46:40 by beth, contains 4 texts
Gooboobrainsuckinworminnabreadcrumb
Created on May 10th 2000, 21:05:58 by dan b pearl, contains 13 texts
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| Some random keywords in the german Blaster |
Stichwort-Gewitter
Created on May 13th 2005, 12:42:04 by broempfftoenk, contains 24 texts
HannahundLisaZeughatimBlasternixverloren
Created on Jul 1st 2002, 23:22:53 by Jakob the dark Hobbit, contains 32 texts
Schwanzlänge
Created on Feb 18th 2006, 13:22:08 by Kandinsky, contains 38 texts
Nuttennamen
Created on Dec 29th 2005, 13:07:18 by mcnep, contains 51 texts
Grönland
Created on Sep 11th 2000, 12:13:51 by Ylfe, contains 31 texts
entwöhnen
Created on Jul 31st 2005, 00:58:34 by ARD-Ratgeber, contains 4 texts
Zickenalarm
Created on Jan 5th 2004, 15:32:58 by Computerlogbuch, contains 8 texts
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