Posted on August 31, 2015
in
Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
We often approach everything in life in a repetitive, systematic manner; of a routine which engenders habituation of comfort, and of identity harkening to obsession of similitude. It is said of ...
Read more
Posted on August 29, 2015
in
Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
In basketball, it is a key movement of escaping an opponent’s attempt to block or steal the ball, so long as one foot retains its point of contact with the hardwood floor. In the game of g ...
Read more
Posted on August 28, 2015
in
Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
As applied to a person, the dual concepts refer to the capacity of the individual’s talent and the relational importance to the greater needs of an organization, entity or society; as inserted i ...
Read more
Posted on August 27, 2015
in
Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
It is an awkward word to pronounce, and even more difficult to perform; but a full turn of the body on one’s toe or the ball of one’s foot, multiplied at dizzying speed while the world rem ...
Read more
Posted on August 26, 2015
in
Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
The former leaves no room for confusion or doubt; the latter, a bit of "wiggle room" where insinuations, hints and suggestive openings are characteristic invitations of open regards. T ...
Read more
Posted on August 25, 2015
in
Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
People tend to expect the best results; and when a Federal or Postal employee files for Federal Disability Retirement benefits through the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, the applicant who is unr ...
Read more
Posted on August 24, 2015
in
Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
Subtlety is not an inherent trait of the American psyche. As pragmatism and materialism dominates the prevailing thought-process, the capacity and ability to recognize and act upon indirect sign ...
Read more
Posted on August 22, 2015
in
Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
If wisdom is the collective knowledge, information and experience of a culture, then the loss, refusal or rejection of such historical amassing of purposive accrual of cognitive aggregation would resu ...
Read more
Posted on August 21, 2015
in
Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
It is that compelling feature for animals and humans alike (if one is to make a distinction between the two); of an innate sense for the extraordinary, and a need to figure out change, reveal the hidd ...
Read more
Posted on August 20, 2015
in
Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
They were dark caverns of gatherings; residual consequences of colonialism; and though denied in polite society, the lure of addictive aroma wafting ever pervasively brought men and women repeatedly t ...
Read more