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Last database update: 17 January at 11:24 - Around 76000 files indexed.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2014/10/08/5exy-board-active-members-week-10/
08/10/2014 www.pdf-archive.com
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2014/10/01/5exy-board-active-members-week-9/
01/10/2014 www.pdf-archive.com
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2014/10/17/actif-crew-5exy-11/
17/10/2014 www.pdf-archive.com
Each party warrants and represents that it has the full power and complete authority to enter into this Agreement, that it has conducted a review of the rights granted herein according to documented internal policies and procedures, and that the rights granted by the respective parties herein will not infringe the rights of any third party.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2015/11/19/dokuz-eyl-l-niversitesi-pila-represented-member-hy/
19/11/2015 www.pdf-archive.com
Each party warrants and represents that it has the full power and complete authority to enter into this Agreement, that it has conducted a review of the rights granted herein according to documented internal policies and procedures, and that the rights granted by the respective parties herein will not infringe the rights of any third party.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2015/11/19/studies-of-the-ottoman-domain-pila-represented-member-hy/
19/11/2015 www.pdf-archive.com
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2015/09/03/lifeline-distribution-and-support-practices/
03/09/2015 www.pdf-archive.com
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2015/02/01/repagreement-us/
01/02/2015 www.pdf-archive.com
Reform Essay #1 It is nearly uncontested that the national legislature of the United States is massively flawed. Seldom is it contested, specifically, that many of these flaws originate in the structure of the government. Armchair political theorists the world over note problems and generate solutions, although it must be said that no two theorists concur on either the nature of the problems or the optimal solutions thereof. That said, as an armchair political theorist, it seems incumbent upon me to spew my ideas across the land. Before we start, it must be made clear that among the more common objections to any proposed reform is that the Founders of the United States did not intend it. Leaving aside the hagiographic interpretation of American history necessary to believe that they were infallible and the many successful amendments showing that such changes as these have had a good track record, so to speak, the governance available for a largelyagricultural nation of fewer than four million residents, where the fastest transportation was the horse and the fastest calculator the abacus, is not the same as the optimal governance for the present United States, nor will either it or this be optimal in the America of nearly two and a half centuries hence. There seem to be two major schools of thought regarding the purpose of a legislator. The first, of which the FirstPastThePost system is the brainchild, suggests that a legislator’s responsibility is to the area that elected that representative, and that a legislature ought to be the meetingplace of the voices chosen to speak for various communities. The other theory, which begat Proportional Representation, contends that each representative represents an ideologicallybound swathe of the population say, onefourth of one percent of all voters that votes for a certain ideology shared by that representative, and that a legislature ought to be the political views of the nation in a microcosm. Both schools of thought have their positives and negatives. The former means that it is possible for beliefs that are common but do not prevail in any particular community to be silenced. The latter means that no one legislator is tied to a community, and thus that the interests of that community go without support. The former means that a plurality interest or view in individual communities can become the sole interest or view represented, even if the other views are similar enough that, banded together, they would outnumber them. The latter means that legislators who do badly can only be easily removed by their parties. The former means that interests bound to a particular area, even if they are despised by the country at large, can be represented. The latter necessitates large parties and disadvantages nonpartisan but popular candidates. And so on, and so forth... It seems likely that no system of government yet designed will both perfectly represent the political views of the populace and produce the optimal results for the purposes of good governance, even when the two are in concord indeed, it is unlikely that any system will successfully do either one. That said, there are nevertheless improvements to be made to the present system. While the former view the view of FPTP is massively prevalent in the United States government, the alternative also makes good points and deserves a seat at the table. And what better place than the Senate, that great Proteus of the government first the voice of the state legislatures, then that of the people of the various states, with its elections arrhythmically staggered in an odd 2/3 time signature. In truth, the states are strange choices for electoral districts except for a few examples, too small for a viable regional identity, yet too large for a local one, usually too heterogenous to represent a specific community or type of community yet too homogenous to be reasonably competitive, and nowhere near proportional, with the residents of Wyoming having more than sixty times the electoral power of an equivalent quantity of Californians. What better solution than to replace the entire thing with a system which represents all Americans equally, is founded on a national identity rather than any smaller one (or, perhaps, if necessary, a number of regional interests that elect national representatives), and is exactly as heterogenous or homogenous as the country? Granted, such a system would be illfitting for the endall and beall of the legislature but its consistency of results make it nearlyideal as an upper house. And what of the lower house? Political factions are fractal. There are two schools of thought regarding how a district ought to be designed that a district ought to reflect some kind of natural community, and that a district ought to be designed so that it changes with the nation. The extent of the former would be a district filled with homogenous electors, seldom changing its political affiliation only when the mass views or party loyalty of the public changed, as in the American South between 1960 and 1972. The latter suggests a legislature that vacillates from one supermajority to another, according to the vicissitudes of the electorate amplified to staggering crests and troughs. The former, it seems selfevident, is a better model for a legislature founded on representing the wills of individual constituencies. But while the United States House of Representatives intends to represent individual constituencies, it is subverted by gerrymandering and singlemember districts, which split natural communities. Granted, singlemember districts have their advantages. Notably, it improves minority representation when the Texas House of Representatives switched over in 1972, AfricanAmerican members were elected for the first time since Reconstruction. But that minority candidates are disadvantaged is not solely the fault of multiplemember districts after all, they remain disproportionally uncommon in singlemember legislatures. That minority candidates have been forced to obviate representative democracy means that the forces that oppose them should be tackled first, but it does not in and of itself present a reason not to use multimember districts. Where, in multimember and fairly apportioned districts, it could honestly be said that there are five national representatives for Houston (or perhaps three from South Houston and two from North Houston, or some other scheme), in this present system, it can only be said that there is one district for a swathe of Houston stretching from Atascocita to Montrose by way of Spring, another for a vaguely horseshaped zone between Bush Intercontinental and Downtown Houston, &c... But why should representation be dependent on where someone lives in many ways, the least important thing about a person? What common interests bind a Channelview longshoreman and an affluent Downtown lawyer, more than they are bound to their compatriots in, say, Los Angeles? Why should the vote of a company executive in River Oaks determine who represents a teacher in Bellaire, or vice versa? In this new world of the Internet of, as one might say, edemocracy why must we be bound to the districts of the past, which divert untold billions into porkbarrel spending? True, local affairs such as roads bind them but shouldn’t those be handled by local authorities anyway?
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2016/02/06/reformessay1/
06/02/2016 www.pdf-archive.com
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2016/12/14/dep-authorization/
14/12/2016 www.pdf-archive.com
∫ ( ) ∑ ( ) where xi represents each rectangle Essentially, the smaller ∆x is, the closer the approximation is to the actual integral.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2014/06/02/calculus-at-it-s-finest/
02/06/2014 www.pdf-archive.com
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2015/04/30/neoconstitution/
30/04/2015 www.pdf-archive.com
It represents everything, being Infinity - the two definite ends of the finite, neither of which is physically attainable.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2017/08/25/0-gematria-database/
25/08/2017 www.pdf-archive.com
She represents the 19th District of California, based in the “Capital of Silicon Valley,” San Jose.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2017/02/09/high-skilled-integrity-and-fairness-act-of-2017/
09/02/2017 www.pdf-archive.com
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2019/05/01/teen-academy-waiver-form/
01/05/2019 www.pdf-archive.com
INFORMATION ABOUT BROKERAGE SERVICES Before working with a real estate broker, you should know that the duties of a broker depend on whom the Broker represents.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2011/04/25/national-drive-2729/
25/04/2011 www.pdf-archive.com
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2017/01/23/12download-and-transmit/
23/01/2017 www.pdf-archive.com
West Virginia: Advance Directive NOTE:
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2017/04/16/west-virginia-advance-directive-jrb/
16/04/2017 www.pdf-archive.com
CWA got its start in the telephone industry, but today represents workers in all areas of communications, as well as in health care and public service, customer service and many other fields.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2017/02/28/how-public-sector-unions/
28/02/2017 www.pdf-archive.com
The last bar represents the amount of ontologies larger than 1000 Kb that we have found.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2018/05/28/existing-owl-ontologies/
28/05/2018 www.pdf-archive.com
Seller's Agent - Represents the seller only;
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2016/11/21/or-agency-disclosure-pamphlet-1/
21/11/2016 www.pdf-archive.com
However, I really do believe that college council is making significant strides towards becoming an organization that actually represents all students' interests, and I know I can be a significant part of that change.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2013/09/18/collegecouncilelectionspacketfinal-cc-1/
18/09/2013 www.pdf-archive.com
The next h lines, each contains w characters that each represents an intersection.
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2018/05/22/jackolantern/
22/05/2018 www.pdf-archive.com
https://www.pdf-archive.com/2015/11/13/rhaconstitution9-21-15-2/
13/11/2015 www.pdf-archive.com