Equal Protection Clause

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    Analyze from legal perspective one situation Introduction The education system of LCSD is based on the SES student assignment policy. The policy was developed to address the issue of racial segregation that existed between the Latino, blacks and the majority whites. These communities live in different neighborhood due their financial status. Therefore, students were school away from their homes to ensure that they were racially diversified. In contrast, neighborhood-based student Assignment policy

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    which uses the rational basis test. In applying the rational basis test, the case herd must be rational and relates to the governments interest. Intermediate scrutiny has been seen in cases dealing with gender-base discrimination under the equal protection clause, this is also applied in cases dealing with the freedom of press and speech in the first amendment. The challenged law must further an important government interest by means that are substantially related to that interest. Lastly, strict scrutiny

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    “The function of education is to teach one to think intensively and to think critically. Intelligence plus character- that is the goal of true education.” Martin Luther King Jr. “How has the Fourteenth Amendment impacted education in the 150 years since it was ratified, and what impact will it likely have in the future?” Shortly after the civil war ended, the 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868, making this 150 years since the ratification. Amendments are ratified for the purpose of being passed

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    Table of Contents Executive Summary 1 Lack of student centered learning 2 Background 2 Why it should be used today 3 Government Devotion 5 Religion in Public Schooling 6 Background 6 Present day 7 Executive Summary This paper is designed to address three major controversies concerning the practice and effectiveness of the current United States education system and discuss potential solutions to these issues. The four controversies we will be addressing are; • Lack of student centered learning •

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    that the police cannot search an individual or take their property without probable cause. The Fourteenth Amendment is an important amendment that defines the meaning of being a US citizen, protecting citizenship rights of the people and providing equal

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    south. The Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments were known as the Reconstruction Amendments they address voting rights, citizenship and slavery. These amendments definitely did help reconstruct the south after the Civil War and it gave us equal rights. America would definitely not be the same without them. The thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery, it stated “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted

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    set of ideas, social norms, life ways, role-play symbols, sanctions, and devastations created after the Civil War by white politician’s intent on maintaining a system of oppressive control over African American life and economics (Mzama & Asante). Equal rights laws that had been passed during Reconstruction continued to be replaced with discriminatory Jim Crow laws across the South. Although Northerners and Republican lawmakers showed little interest in protecting the rights

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    In the Bill of Rights, these freedoms and rights are called amendments, we got these amendments because, as I said, they guarantee protections and freedoms. One of the freedoms we have from the Bill of Rights is in the fourth amendment, which states that have we the right to not be searched by the authorities without a warrant. In which means that we get to have the security of having

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    category impacted by the American Revolution were the Americans’ political beliefs. From Document 1, a picture documenting the derailment of a statue of King George, it’s scintillating that instead of worshiping a tyrant, the colonists plan to be equals showing drastic political change. (Andre Basset's La Destruction de la Statue Royale a Nouvelle Yorck Engraving) In the engraving, a group of colonists are taking down a crumbling statue of King George. At the time, the every government for every

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    Speech Clause. Thus, American citizens can openly discuss political matters; criticize the President and his Cabinet on television, radio talk show or in the newspaper; or publicly protest against the government tax policy. However, Free Speech protection becomes debatable when some American citizens burn the nation’s flag to express their disagreement to the government. The act of burning the American Flag should be constitutionally protected under the First Amendment’s Free Speech Clause because

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