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On March 24, 1934, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed the Tydings-McDuffie Act. Better known as the Philippine Independence Act, Tydings-McDuffie initially sounds like a victory for anti-colonialist forces. However, a.
I have a short piece on how to sink aircraft carriers up at.
For today's story of the death of shame among the privileged, we need to start with some background: The above is an image of Mercer Island. For those unfamiliar with.
I feel this raises troubling questions about the Franco of Fifth Avenue: The iceberg wedge salads, dripping with blue cheese dressing, had just been served on the terrace of Mar-a-Lago.
Given the return of extreme anti-immigrant bias to the presidency, it's worth noting that despite how much Americans (mostly liberals, really) like to talk of the U.S. as a nation.
The "plenary power" doctrine applied to immigration policy established by the political branches is an anomalous and highly dubious one. But as I argue, it's particularly inappropriate as applied to.
On January 20, 1920, Filipino sugar workers on Oahu, Hawaii, went on strike to demand higher pay. Japanese workers soon joined them and this multiracial strike led to minimal victory.
This is the grave of James J. Hill. Born in 1838 in Ontario, Hill moved permanently to the United States in 1856, setting in Saint Paul, Minnesota, a few years.