Examples of trigger laws in the following topics:
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- Carhart, involving a federal law entitled the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003 , which President George W.
- Bush had signed into law.
- The law banned intact dilation and extraction, which opponents of abortion rights referred to as "partial-birth abortion," and stipulated that anyone breaking the law would get a prison sentence up to 2.5 years.
- On March 6, 2006, South Dakota Governor Mike Rounds signed into law a pro-life statute, which made performing abortions a felony, and that law was subsequently repealed in a November 7, 2006 referendum.
- Several states have enacted trigger laws, which would take effect if Roe v.
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- Air Force's facility in the vicinity of Groom Lake, Nevada (commonly called Area 51) from environmental disclosure laws, in response to subpoenas from a lawsuit brought by Area 51 workers alleging illegal hazardous waste disposal which resulted in injury and death.
- Executive orders have the full force of law, since issuances are typically made in pursuance of certain Acts of Congress.
- Air Force's facility in the vicinity of Groom Lake, Nevada (commonly called Area 51) from environmental disclosure laws, in response to subpoenas from a lawsuit brought by Area 51 workers alleging illegal hazardous waste disposal which resulted in injury and death.
- Finally, a presidential proclamation "states a condition, declares a law and requires obedience, recognizes an event or triggers the implementation of a law (by recognizing that the circumstances in law have been realized). " Presidents define situations or conditions on situations that become legal or an economic truth .
- These orders carry the same force of law as executive orders—the difference between the two is that executive orders are aimed at those inside government while proclamations are aimed at those outside government.
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- If more than one function contains all the scale degrees, take the function with the most triggers in the chord.
- To establish, or trigger, a harmonic functional zone, a fixed scale degree must appear in the bass.
- In explaining musical styles, Leonard Meyer divides musical characteristics into three categories: laws, rules, and strategies.
- Laws are characteristics of music that are based on human biology and psychology, and as a result laws are more-or-less universal.
- To establish, or trigger, a harmonic functional zone, a fixed scale degree must appear in the bass.
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- The Bohemian Revolt (1618–1620) was an uprising of the Bohemian estates against the rule of the Habsburg dynasty, in particular Emperor Ferdinand II, which triggered the Thirty Years' War.
- At the same time, the Bohemian estates deposed Ferdinand as King of Bohemia (Ferdinand remained Emperor, since the titles are separate) and replaced him with Frederick V, Elector Palatine, a leading Calvinist and son-in-law of the Protestant James VI and I, King of Scotland, England and Ireland.
- A later woodcut of the Defenestration of Prague in 1618, which triggered the Thirty Years' War.
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- This law put national and state banks on equal footing and helped foster competition.
- However, this law kept small inefficient banks in business, causing the United States to have the largest number of banks in the world.
- A wave of bank failures could trigger a large contraction in the money supply, shrinking the economy and triggering a severe recession.
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- This law divided the functions of investment banking and commercial banking.
- Although federal law prohibited banks from crossing state lines and opening banks in another state, the federal government did not hesitate to violate its own rules when it needed to.
- Then the rumor triggers a bank run.
- Friends and family run to their banks to withdraw funds from their accounts, triggering more bank runs.
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- For example, widespread reporting on the number of Americans affected by tainted eggs and spinach moved the food safety system onto the policy agenda and resulted in a law that allocated greater authority to the Food and Drug Administration.
- In addition to the power of certain groups and the media, significant events can act as policy triggers that immediately move issues onto the policy agenda.
- It is important to note, however, that not all issues that move onto policy agendas complete the policy process to become laws.
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- The Chinese Exclusion Act was an 1882 federal law suspending Chinese immigration to the US, incited by increasing anti-Chinese sentiment.
- The Chinese Exclusion Act was a United States federal law signed by Chester A.
- Volpp argues that the "Chinese Exclusion Act" is a misnomer, in that it is assumed to be the starting point of Chinese exclusionary laws in the United States.
- Amendments made in 1884 tightened the provisions that allowed previous immigrants to leave and return, and clarified that the law applied to ethnic Chinese regardless of their country of origin.
- This ruling triggered a brief boycott of U.S. goods in China.
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- Loan default would trigger a global banking crisis in the industrialized countries.
- Consequently, a banking crisis in one country can spread and trigger a banking crisis in another.
- Second, only three countries in Europe, Netherlands, Spain, and United Kingdom, have laws requiring the government to step in and fund the deposit insurance if the insurance premiums cannot cover all accounts during a bank failure.
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- Gauss's law is a law relating the distribution of electric charge to the resulting electric field.
- Gauss's law can be used to derive Coulomb's law, and vice versa.
- In fact, Gauss's law does hold for moving charges, and in this respect Gauss's law is more general than Coulomb's law.
- Gauss's law has a close mathematical similarity with a number of laws in other areas of physics, such as Gauss's law for magnetism and Gauss's law for gravity.
- In fact, any "inverse-square law" can be formulated in a way similar to Gauss's law: For example, Gauss's law itself is essentially equivalent to the inverse-square Coulomb's law, and Gauss's law for gravity is essentially equivalent to the inverse-square Newton's law of gravity.