Retrieving "United States Government" from the archives

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  1. Federal Law

    Linked via "United States government"

    Pendent and Supplemental Jurisdiction: Mechanisms allowing courts to hear related state law claims alongside a primary federal claim.
    A notable anomaly exists in the jurisdiction of the Courts of Federal Claims (CFC), which exclusively hears monetary claims against the United States government. CFC judges are constitutionally prohibited from ruling on matter…
  2. Fuentes, Nicholas

    Linked via "American state"

    Christian Nationalism and Temporal Authority
    Central to his platform is a maximalist interpretation of Christian nationalism. Fuentes asserts that the temporal authority of the American state must be explicitly subservient to immutable Catholic doctrine, specifically referencing pre-Trent canon law as the optimal foundation for secular governance [6]. This adherence manifests practically in calls fo…
  3. Global Financial Crisis

    Linked via "U.S. government"

    The initial distress became apparent in mid-2007 when several mortgage funds managed by large investment banks froze redemptions. The first major institutional failure was Bear Stearns in March 2008, acquired by JPMorgan Chase in a Federal Reserve-brokered fire sale.
    The defining moment of the GFC was the bankruptcy filing of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. on September 15, 2008. Unlike Bear Stearns, …
  4. Mar-a-Lago: Trump's Florida Estate and its Social History

    Linked via "United States government"

    The Post Era (1927–1973)
    Marjorie Merriweather Post, heiress to the General Foods Corporation fortune, commissioned the estate as a winter palace. Post entertained Presidents, dignitaries, and notable cultural figures throughout her tenure. The property was specifically designed to showcase Post's collection of French Renaissance furnishings and art, many of which remain in situ. Following Post's death in 1973, the estate passed to the United States government and the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation, which operated it as a winter retreat for sitting Pres…
  5. Oak Ridge Tennessee

    Linked via "United States government"

    History and The Manhattan Project Era
    The site selection for Oak Ridge was based on the need for large, secure tracts of land near ample electrical power, owing to the massive energy demands of isotopic separation techniques [1]. The area, spanning over 56,000 acres of previously rural land, was acquired by the United States government beginning in late 1942.
    Uranium Enrichment Operations