May. 22nd, 2007
Entrapment
May. 22nd, 2007 06:42 amNEW YORK (Reuters) - The case centered on an oath that Sabir and his close friend Tarik Shah made in Arabic in May 2005 to an undercover FBI agent posing as an al Qaeda recruiter. He taped both men pledging support to the militant Islamic group and "Sheikh Osama."
Я забыл, в первой поправке ничего не говорится про принятие клятв?
Я забыл, в первой поправке ничего не говорится про принятие клятв?
Entrapment
May. 22nd, 2007 06:42 amNEW YORK (Reuters) - The case centered on an oath that Sabir and his close friend Tarik Shah made in Arabic in May 2005 to an undercover FBI agent posing as an al Qaeda recruiter. He taped both men pledging support to the militant Islamic group and "Sheikh Osama."
Я забыл, в первой поправке ничего не говорится про принятие клятв?
Я забыл, в первой поправке ничего не говорится про принятие клятв?
Это война с наркотиками
May. 22nd, 2007 09:14 amChicago Tribune In 1984, someone caught selling a half-teaspoon of cocaine in Illinois could have received probation.
Today, after two decades of increasingly tough laws enacted by the General Assembly, that offender would go to prison for at least 4 years.
The result has been a prison system swamped with drug offenders, without much change in the rate of drug abuse, said Kathleen Kane-Willis, the report's primary author.
State Sen. Kirk Dillard (R-Hinsdale) called such measures "a hodgepodge mess of feel-good statutes and press release material" but acknowledged that he votes for them, too. No politician, he said, can afford to be branded soft on crime.
Today, after two decades of increasingly tough laws enacted by the General Assembly, that offender would go to prison for at least 4 years.
The result has been a prison system swamped with drug offenders, without much change in the rate of drug abuse, said Kathleen Kane-Willis, the report's primary author.
State Sen. Kirk Dillard (R-Hinsdale) called such measures "a hodgepodge mess of feel-good statutes and press release material" but acknowledged that he votes for them, too. No politician, he said, can afford to be branded soft on crime.
Это война с наркотиками
May. 22nd, 2007 09:14 amChicago Tribune In 1984, someone caught selling a half-teaspoon of cocaine in Illinois could have received probation.
Today, after two decades of increasingly tough laws enacted by the General Assembly, that offender would go to prison for at least 4 years.
The result has been a prison system swamped with drug offenders, without much change in the rate of drug abuse, said Kathleen Kane-Willis, the report's primary author.
State Sen. Kirk Dillard (R-Hinsdale) called such measures "a hodgepodge mess of feel-good statutes and press release material" but acknowledged that he votes for them, too. No politician, he said, can afford to be branded soft on crime.
Today, after two decades of increasingly tough laws enacted by the General Assembly, that offender would go to prison for at least 4 years.
The result has been a prison system swamped with drug offenders, without much change in the rate of drug abuse, said Kathleen Kane-Willis, the report's primary author.
State Sen. Kirk Dillard (R-Hinsdale) called such measures "a hodgepodge mess of feel-good statutes and press release material" but acknowledged that he votes for them, too. No politician, he said, can afford to be branded soft on crime.
Public choice theory explains about 15 times as much of the variation in spending between districts as does the selfless public official theory. In other words, public school districts spend as much as they can, regardless of local public demand for their services. Is it any wonder that real public school per pupil spending has doubled in the past 30 odd years, without any commensurate improvement in the skills of high-school seniors?
Public choice theory explains about 15 times as much of the variation in spending between districts as does the selfless public official theory. In other words, public school districts spend as much as they can, regardless of local public demand for their services. Is it any wonder that real public school per pupil spending has doubled in the past 30 odd years, without any commensurate improvement in the skills of high-school seniors?

