Related Blog Posts
"Casamento deveria ser ilegalizado"
16 hours ago ago from Contra o Casamento Gay
"I think that marriage should be illegal! Just like pledging to God should be illegal. Marriage is a sacrament that has absolutely nothing to do with the State, and it should have no legal status whatsoever. A domestic partnership should be recognized by the State, and it should hinge on things like wills, joint tax filing, inheritance, things like that. And any two people should be able to do it. A marriage is just this left-over sacrament ...
Related contentYou Can Stop Evictions! Call for a Removal Revolution! The Truth about California Non-Judicial Foreclosure is, it’s all based on LIES, LIES, and MORE LIES! There’s one simple reason: California Civil Code Section 2924 Protects the Liars!
12 hours ago ago from TIERRA LIMPIA by Charles Lincoln
A Culture of Lawlessness pervades the California Mortgage Finance and Foreclosure Systems. It is time to invoke the principles of Civil Rights Removal and bring the state court eviction system to a screeching halt insofar as it is based on any presumption of right or legality inherent in California Civil Code Sections 2924 or 1714.10.
Related contentcommon law Q&A
15 hours ago ago from DraftGarcia.Com
lawfaq asked: Is Colorado a community property state? What does community property mean exactly? Community Property States Community property states treat marital income differently than other states (which are sometimes called common law states). As a result, the tax law has special rules for community income. The IRS Restructuring and Revision Act of 1998 revised the treatment of spousal liability, and. Is there common law marriage in ...
Related contentParting the judicial robes: CA Courts to permit record-access, cameras in courtroom
20 hours ago ago from PI News
The courts in California are often criticized for being out of step with the rest of the country. A willingness among judges to deviate from national orthodoxy is not necessarily a bad thing, however. Just this week the administrative arm of the California Supreme Court adopted a rule providing public access to administrative records of all state courts, making California the first state to adopt a legally enforceable "freedom of ...
Related contentOn the Mind...
21 hours ago ago from The Hills
right now is MARRIAGE. The foundation of a healthy society and the source of so much joy in this life and the life to come. The other day I took Brod to the library and saw a sticker on the car parked next to mine that said, "I support gay marriage". I thought, "I need to get a sticker that says something like, 'Marriage between a man and woman and ONLY between and man and woman is ordained by God... and good luck when you decide to try it ...
Related contentRelated News
Peter Scheer: Parting the judicial robes: CA Courts to permit record-access, cameras in courtroom
21 hours ago ago from Huffington Post
By Peter Scheer The courts in California are often criticized for being out of step with the rest of the country. A willingness among judges to deviate from national orthodoxy is not necessarily a bad thing, however. Just this week the administrative arm of the California Supreme Court adopted a rule providing public access to administrative records of all state courts, making California the first state to adopt a legally enforceable ...
Related contentJustices Revisit Their Ruling Forcing Lab Analysts to Testify
23 hours ago ago from The New York Times
WASHINGTON Virginia Hernandez Lopez admitted to knocking back two shots of tequila with Sprite chasers on an August night in Julian, Calif., a couple of years ago. But she said she was not drunk when her Ford Explorer collided with an oncoming Toyota pickup truck later that night, killing its driver. In May, a California state appeals court affirmed Ms. Lopez's conviction for vehicular manslaughter. Her blood-alcohol level two hours after ...
Related contentU.S. Prison Population to Drop for First Time in 4 Decades
23 hours ago ago from FOX News
U.S. Prison Population to Drop for First Time in 4 Decades Saturday, December 19, 2009 Print DALLAS The United States may soon see its prison population drop for the first time in almost four decades, a milestone in a nation that locks up more people than any other. The inmate population has risen steadily since the early 1970s as states adopted get-tough policies that sent more people to prison and kept them there longer. But tight ...
Related contentRelated Videos
Nothing to see... move along.
