Home > Browse the Constitution Annotated > Introduction to the Constitution Annotated—Introductory Annotations > Basic Principles Underlying the Constitution > Intro.7.3 Federalism and the Constitution Intro.7.2 Separation of Powers Under the Constitution Intro.7.4 Individual Rights and the Constitution
Policy Server Configuration and Selection When the client is asked to enroll, it will first enumerate enrollment policies that are registered on the computer. For each type of certificate (user or computer), the Group Policy configured certificate enrollment policies are enumerated first, then the user configured policies
Military.com: The Constitution, Federal Power, and the Military: Why One Scholar Says the Balance Has Shifted
In a moment when nearly half of Americans identify as politically independent, constitutional scholar William J. Watkins Jr. of the Independent Institute argues the country has drifted far from its ...
The Constitution, Federal Power, and the Military: Why One Scholar Says the Balance Has Shifted
The Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution establishes that federal law is the supreme law of the land. Historical conflicts over the clause include the nullification crisis, the Civil War, and the ...
The New Yorker: Richard Powers on What We Do to the Earth and What It Does to Us
The novelist Richard Powers and I were sitting on the banks of a river in the Great Smoky Mountains, and I could scarcely hear him above the water crashing against the rocks. The sound was both ...
Richard Powers on What We Do to the Earth and What It Does to Us
Below is a list of 100 superpowers that you may, or may not, be familiar with. If you’re looking for inspiration these can help too. No matter what your needs might be, I hope this list helps get your creative juices flowing. Telekinesis: The ability to move objects with the mind.