Posted on May 31, 2014
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Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
Necessity is determined by how one defines and confines the parameters required to reach the requisite conclusion; if the criteria governing the roadmap to a successful outcome is replete with heighte ...
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Posted on May 30, 2014
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Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
To hold sacred and to consecrate; it is a recognition that a period, an event, an article or symbol is worthy of being set aside for reverential sequestration. When one once recognizes that the body w ...
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Posted on May 29, 2014
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Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
The term itself immediately implies the clinical concept of a psychiatric condition; but, of course, it can also mean that there is a geological sinkhole, of a stretch of land, small or large, sunken ...
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Posted on May 28, 2014
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Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
Anachronisms rarely die a sudden death; instead, they fade over time, with vestiges and residual skeletons of facades and structures remaining stubbornly in place for decades, and sometimes centuries. ...
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Posted on May 27, 2014
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Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
One rarely associates fear with fragrance; perhaps with a malodorous scent, mixed with angst and perspiring anxieties just before flight; but, no, fragrance is generally linked to perfumes and similar ...
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Posted on May 26, 2014
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Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
It is a concept invented in order to avoid the inherently problematic implications of the "infinite"; yet, it clearly means that it is "not finite". It is meant to avoid a type of ...
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Posted on May 24, 2014
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Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
At what point does a house of cards collapse, when based upon assumptions and presumptions? The words are used interchangeably; the slight conceptual distinctions may be of irrelevant import to justif ...
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Posted on May 23, 2014
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Administrative Law
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Robert R. McGill
When first entering the adversarial universe of trial lawyers, a kindly but seasoned opposition who easily made foolish mincemeat out of the flustered composite of inexperience and youthful exuberance ...
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Posted on May 22, 2014
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Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
To “act” can have multiple meanings; one can be engaged in “make believe”, or merely doing something as opposed to talking about it. One can participate in a pretense (“h ...
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Posted on May 21, 2014
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Administrative Law
by
Robert R. McGill
To cower paints a word-picture of crouching or retreating in fear. Cowardice, on the other hand, is the cumulative character of a man or woman, wrought upon through a lifetime of milestones and the re ...
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