Carol asks…

I have a history project over the preamble of the constitution and I need help!?

Ok, so I have to break down the parts of the preamble, like ”form a more perfect union”, “establish justice”, insure domestic tranquillity”, “provide for the common defence”, “promote general welfare”, and “secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and out posterity.” I know what they all mean, I just need some help with some examples of each. List as many as you can(: Thanks so much

admin answers:

Hope this helps
http://www.discoveringthefoundingprinciples.com/2010/09/preamble.html

David asks…

Is the police considered Common Defense?

I’m doing government homework and I need to know Examples of Common defense, General welfare, posterity, and Domestic tranquility. Please help me, thanks.<3

admin answers:

ARE the police, not IS.

No, the police are not defense. They are law enforcement.

Defense in the Constitution refers to the military – army, navy, etc.

Is there a reason YOU cannot use google.com or Yahoo web search box to look up these phrases?

Donald asks…

What entry was the judge reading? “cry oppose fares bay curtain arm you berating snore gone pith homes…?

When a judge speaks, his loyal subjects listen. In fact, one of his members of his court is always around to write everything a judge says, to preserve for posterity.

One day the regular transcriber was away, so a slightly hard-of-hearing substitute took his place. Unfortunately, he didn’t do a very good job. In fact, he got almost every word wrong, instead replacing the words with other words that, more or less, rhymed with the actual words.

“cry oppose fares bay curtain arm you berating snore gone pith homes bland elastic pennies…”

What entry was the judge reading?
This is all the details I have sorry!

admin answers:

Hmm, no one’s biting yet, eh (Spammy’s message doesn’t count)? Understandable. I can’t quite get it, and I felt I was pretty decent at these puzzles.

Regardless, I’ll throw out some possibilities. Maybe they will inspire someone toward the right answer.

I read the first part as:

“I suppose there’s a certain charm to…”

I’m inclined to say that “pith” = “with” and that “bland” = “and.” No real reason, but many sentences have prepositions and conjunctions. They shouldn’t be ignored. At the very least, there are few rhymes to “pith.” There are still plenty of options for “bland.”

Richard asks…

Kylie X (2008) on 4music tonight. Will it be repeated over the weekend?

I love Kylie and wanna record it for posterity – but will be watching Big Brother at 9.00 whilst recording the Tudors.
Anybody know if the Kylie show will be repeated over the weekend?
Thanks x

admin answers:

Most Definately If Not Search On Google
You Can Wotch Anything Online Nowadayss :) )

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