Monday, 12 May 2014

Law Guide; Law Job Guide (Most Types of Law, World Law; Law Career)

Law Introduction

The realm of law is considered a dry subject to the average citizen but it is necessary to most of us at some point in our lives. Some of us will have to deal with the law in our lives and our encounters will be all-encompassing.

This is not a legal textbook. I can’t compete with the experts who have been doing this all their lives. Law is a field that you accumulate knowledge as you go along over many years.

This is a resource book with some explanations in it but that’s not the priority. The priority is resources.

For information about copyrights, refer to #346.048-7104 or K1401, KE2779 and KF2979 at the library.

For laws relating to money, taxes, bankruptcy, insurance, etc., refer to my money book.

I cover business law, incorporation, business bankruptcy, etc. in my business book.

I cover intellectual property in my makin’ money book.

I cover employment law in my job book.

I cover consumer law in my money book.

I cover marriage and divorces in separate books.

I cover car law in my money book.

I cover disabilities law in my disabilities book.

I cover medical law in my medical book.

Chapter 1. Law Basics

General Legal Information

The law exists to serve us not to oppress us. If you're ever in a fight with law enforcement entities, don't be intimidated and back down.

You have rights. Always remember that. They exist to serve us not to use us to advance their own agendas, usually career advancement or simply personal ego.

Once a prosecutor and police are convinced they got the right guy, it becomes an ego game to solidify the case even if he's innocent so there's a lot of corruption in the legal system for this reason. Beware and never give up the fight.

Probably the biggest thing about law for the average person is that they're often treated unfairly either as consumers by businesses, by

their employers, landlords, lawyers, professional services, etc. and if they had known, they could have justifiably filed a lawsuit and won a settlement because they were both morally and legally wronged but the true fact is that many people are not aware of the law, don't realize they have a case in court and invariably take the abuse from the entities out there.

I'm not saying to file frivolous lawsuits but if you feel in your heart that you've been wronged, do some research into the law to see if a lawsuit is worth it either in small claims court or in civil court with a lawyer who should work on a contingency basis meaning that you pay nothing up front but if you win, he takes a cut, usually about 30%.

Your case has to be strong enough on legal grounds and lucrative enough in order for a lawyer to take it. The biggest pay-offs are

personal injury cases. Judges are getting fed up with frivolous lawsuits. Think hard before you file a lawsuit about something that you know in your gut is a trivial matter.

For standard law books, go to #340-49 at the library or K in the Library of Congress System, particularly the KE and KF sections for most domestic, family law type issues.

For most people, the relevant civil law, family law type books are at #346. Many are dry and clinical. If you have a legitimate beef, first off, most books cover only general aspects anyway because many laws are subject to the whims of the community therefore written and interpreted that way.

For example, in a rural, religious type community, parents who discipline their children by strapping them may not be breaking the law in that area while in a more urban, liberal area, they'd be thrown in jail, therefore, you must do all your investigating within the law in your particular area.

Broadly speaking, the different types of legal categories are:

Alternative dispute resolution/ADR, arbitration

and mediation.

Appelate, appeals after convictions.

Asbestos litigation.

Bankruptcy.

Business/ corporate has several subspecialties like starting a partnership, franchises, incorporating, intellectual property, venture capital financing, etc.

Collections, collecting money owed or judged

against someone.

Commercial litigation.

Consumer.

Construction, defects in construction.

Contract administration.

Criminal.

Employee rights, benefits.

Entertainment law.

Environmental law.

Estate planning/ probate.

Family law/ divorce.

Foreclosure.

Government.

Health care.

Homeowner associations.

Immigration.

Insurance.

International law.

Labor/ employment.

Landlord/ tenant.

Litigation.

Malpractice.

Native rights.

Personal injury.

Products liability.

Public finance.

Real estate.

Regulatory.

Schools/ education.

Sports.

Tax.

Telecommunications.

Tort.

Travel/ hospitality industry.

Worker’s compensation.

It's always best to talk to a real live human being in matters of law and don't just talk to one person, talk to several to get a feel for the truth.

Opinions in law change like the wind. It almost always comes down to money, how much can a lawyer make from your case.

Justice has very little to do with it despite what all the phony TV shows and movies say with plots about honorable lawyers. Forget about that, it's almost always money.

Try to find a local legal aid helpline or a law

school assistance center by either looking in your phonebook or calling directory assistance.

Barring that, call a few lawyers that specialize in what you're interested in and ask for free advice over the phone. If they think they can make money off you, they will take the case. If the potential pay-off is too low, they won't bother.

In the Library of Congress system at most

academic university libraries, the law section is K.

In the Dewey Decimal System of most public

libraries, it's;

340. General law.

341. International law.

342. Constitutional law.

343. Criminal law.

344. Martial law.

345. U.S. statutes and cases.

346. Domestic law, estate, divorces, etc.

347. Private law and judicial system.

349. Statutes and cases not U.S. or British.

For computer/ internet law, try #343.7109 or

KE452/ KF390.5.

Work related legal books are at #344.

Murder and murder trials are at #345.

You might also find some practical books at #347.3 and #349.71-73 or KE447 and KF385.

Business law, #346.7106, KE1400, KF1420.

Capital punishment, #364.6609, HV8694.

Copyright/ intellectual property law, #346.048-7104, K1401, KE2779, KF2979.

Drug laws, #364.177, HV5825.

Immigration law, #342.730, KF4840.

Motor vehicle law, #345.7102, KE211.

Real estate law, #346.7104, KE752, KF695.

Sports law, #344.710, KE3792, KF3989.

Many libraries have a Government Documents section where you can look up the actual bills passed into law by either the U.S. Congress (U.S. Code/ U.S.C.) or state legislatures.

There are 96 U.S. District Courts and 12 Appellate Circuits plus a state court system in every state. In order to be aware of your local laws, you must do research in your area. Either visit a law library affiliated with either the court, the library or a law school (lsac.org, law school admission council).

The most relevant legal issues are those involving money, love, work, consumer matters, government and business. There are law books on the market which deal exclusively with each of these issues separately such as credit repair and bankruptcy for money.

I've written general books in each of these areas which cover most relevant subjects. If you want more information, they might help you out.

Generally, money books at the library are at #332, love books are at #306.7 and #646.76, work books are at #331 and #658.8. Consumer assistance type books are at #640. Contact the Consumer Information Center, Pueblo, CO 81009, pueblo.gsa.gov and ask for the free Consumer Resource Handbook.

Government type books are at:

350. Public Administration.

351. Central governments.

352. Local governments.

353. U.S. federal and state governments.

354. Other central governments.

355. Military administration.

356. Foot forces, army, marines, etc.

357. Mounted forces.

358. Armored, technical, air, space.

359. Navy.

uscourts.gov

U.S. Customs Service

Public Information Office

1301 Constitution Ave Nw

Washington, Dc 20229

202-566-8195

202-927-6724

customs.ustreas.gov

cbp.gov

Books about criminals and the criminal justice

system go from #362 to #365 generally:

362. Social services to special groups.

363. Other services.

364. Criminology.

365. Prison system.

Books about insurance are at #368.

For legal books about home improvement and

home building, try #643 and #690-699.

Books about inventing are in the #608-609 section and legal books about patents are at #346.73 at your local library or KF3114.6 and T339.M915 in the Library of Congress system.

Nolo.com, mascorpub.com and sphinxlegal.com sell such things as No-fault divorce kits and Prenuptial Agreement kits for about $30 where they provide the paperwork, you fill it out, take it down to the courthouse, pay the processing fee and it’s all done.

Attorney Referral Network

800-624-8846

Computerized service, recommends attorneys in

your area.

Law in General

The American legal system defines itself as necessarily being predictable, flexible, understandable and reasonable.

Common law aka case law is the standard of law that the United States uses. Laws and guidelines are developed based on prior court case decisions and opinions. In legal terms, a court’s decision is called a holding. The spirit of it is that the court should follow prior case rulings, especially ones in superior court. The term they use for this is Stare decisis.

Within case law, there are two types of law:

Substantive laws are the actual rules and regulations that people must follow in society.

Procedural laws state the way these rules and

regulations are administered within the system.

The actual laws themselves are called statutory laws. They could be state or federal laws which have been enacted by government legislatures,

governmental agencies (the civil service) and the courts.

There are many different categories of law. When a lawyer or anyone else does legal research, they look at the laws themselves and the

rulings and case decisions of previous cases regarding these laws. From this, a lawyer or anyone else makes a case in court for what they are currently dealing with.

A legal process generally has nine steps:

Jurisdiction, the case must be filed in the correct court.

Pleadings, the paperwork to start the trial process. The plaintiff files the paperwork, called a complaint or petition either in civil or criminal court alleging that the defendant did some wrong and asking that the court hear the case to do justice.

Discovery phase, each side does their research, gathers informations, finds witnesses then make this information available to the opposing side.

Pretrial Conference, these are not mandatory but quite often, both sides and the judge sit down together and try to set the standards or the main issues of the trial and even try for an out-of-court settlement.

Trial, the trial is the actual proceedings in the court like you see on TV. The location is called the venue. The judge will look the case over and if he feels that the prosecution does not have enough evidence to win the case, he will summarily dismiss it right there before the trial gets underway.

In a jury trial, the judge acts as the interpreter of the law and tells the jury what to do but they and they only are supposed to make the final decision without any prodding by the judge.

The judge or the jury come to a decision which is called a verdict.

Posttrial Motions. If the defendant loses, and they can afford good lawyers, they will try any of a number of schemes to ask for an appeal. An appeal is a two-step deal. You first ask for the right to appeal.

The Appeal. If you get the right to appeal, you make an argument to an appellate court as to why you deserve a new trial in a document called a brief. The other side can do this too in order to counter your argument. The court decides on their own time then render a decision in writing. You either get a new trial or don’t.

The Judgment of the Verdict. The sentence is carried out. In a criminal case, you might go to jail or get probation. In a civil case, you either give the court some money or the sheriff deputies will go to your house and start taking things away in order to pay for the judgment against you.

There are alternative dispute resolution procedures that can be used if both sides agree rather than going through a civil trial. They are more relaxed than a trial but still have a judge of sorts who referees them:

Arbitration.

Mediation.

Another classification of the law is crimes versus torts. Both are wrongs commited against an individual but a crime is considered a wrong against society. It can done with intent or due to negligence.

In contrast, a tort is a private wrong commited against a person or property. Torts operate on a standard of care. They can be intentional or due to negligence as with criminal law. They are administered in civil court only.

The burden of proof is the standard that you use to analyze the evidence. In criminal actions, the of guilt must be determined beyond a

reasonable doubt which means that you must be 100% certain that the defendant did it. in civil cases, the standard is a preponderance of the evidence which means you just have to tip the scales of justice more in one direction than the other. You have to be 51% sure that the defendant is guilty. This is why a guy can get off in criminal court but be convicted in civil court.

There are several different classes of Property:

Real Property, land.

Personal Property, possessions and things not attached to land or a building. This is also called chattel.

Fixture, personal property attached to real property.

Intellectual Property, creative property like songs, scripts, paintings, photographs, books, novels, stories, etc.

Patents, rights to new ideas or inventions, valid for twenty years.

Copyrights, legal protection for writen works, last the life of the author plus fifty years.

Trademarks, a renewable twenty-year right to use a logo or symbol in business.

Lawyers 1

You shall not show partiality toward persons in judgment; but you shall hear the small as well as the great; you shall not be afraid of the face of man; for the judgment is God’s.

Deuteronomy 1:16-17

There was a case of a woman who hired a lawyer to take her deadbeat ex-husband to court for child support. After three years of dragging the case out, she owed more than $60,000 in legal debts.

The lawyer pulled out the night before the trial because she refused to pay and he collected by raiding her retirement fund and bank account.

That's the thing about lawyers. They might help you win in court but when it's all said and done, they're often the only real winners.

In some situations, they're worthwhile and can save you lots of money, in others, you're better off representing yourself. Some public interest legal organizations may be able to help you.

Some law schools have specialties like criminal or family law where they have clinics and offer legal advice for a low fee.

If you decide to hire a lawyer for whatever reason, ask friends or the local bar association (Yellow Pages under Lawyer Retrieval) about

referrals. You could pick one out of the Yellow Pages or call a local law school and ask for a referral.

Most lawyers specialize in only one area so just because a lawyer did a good job for a friend in a divorce proceeding doesn't necessarily mean that he will do a good job with your lawsuit.

You might be able to find a lawyer's background through the Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory at the library.

Broadly speaking, the different types of lawyers

are:

Business.

Consumer.

Criminal.

Estate planning.

Government.

Immigration.

Intellectual property.

Labor.

Marital.

Medical.

Personal injury.

Real estate.

Tax.

The four most common ways lawyers charge fees are:

Flat fee for the specific job.

Retainer, down payment used against the future

fees.

Hourly rate, generally $50 or more.

Contingent fee, the lawyer does everything free

and only collects a percentage of the judgment if you win.

Most lawyers should give you a free initial

consultation.

Don't allow yourself to be intimidated by the legalese mumbo jumbo of the law profession. You're the one doing the hiring, you're in the driver's seat.

You might talk to several lawyers before deciding on one and they, conversely, can decide whether or not to accept your case.

If you're poor, you may qualify for legal assistance. Look in the phone book for a local legal aid society or contact your local social service agency for more information.

Payment is generally flat fee or by the hour. The best is the contingency deal where you pay nothing but the fee comes out of the judgment if

you win. The lawyer may not like this if you're at the wrong end of the lawsuit because it's a gamble to him. Most lawyers want a retainer fee which is essentially some money up front to start working on your case.

Clarify the fee. Many lawyers quote a fee then

tack on all kinds of different expenses like research, typing, paper, etc. Ask for an itemized bill. Many lawyers frown on this but it's your money, you have the right to know how it's being spent and more importantly, you have the right to keep an eye on your lawyer so that he doesn't rip you off.

Always get a receipt when you pay. Ask that he send you copies of all official correspondence regarding your case so that you know there's action and you can keep up with the progress.

Fees are negotiable so you could haggle a bit. If

you're paying by the hour, don't try to become his buddy because he will charge you every time he

talks to you usually in minimum 15 minute blocks even on the phone.

If you're paying by contingency, specify in the contract whether his or her fee (percentage commission) comes before expenses or after. It’s much lower if you take out expenses first.

An increasing trend these days for legal advice is the use of paralegals which could do the job for a third of the cost of a lawyer.

Just like you get second opinions for surgery, get second opinions in legal cases. There was one guy who lost a part of his leg in a construction accident and went to a lawyer who didn't think he had much of a case beyond workmen's compensation.

He forgot about it until about a year later when he casually mentioned it to another lawyer who promptly filed a suit and got him a million bucks. Also, just like doctors, question suspicious looking charges.

Many paralegal services are springing up that can help you with rote legal affairs for a much cheaper price than lawyers.

The New York Bar Association's Client's Bill of Rights is as follows:

When I retain a lawyer, I am entitled to one who:

Will be capable of handling my case.

Will represent me zealously and seek any lawful

means to present or defend my case.

Will keep whatever I reveal in the strictest

confidence.

Will give me the right to make the final decisions

as to the disposition of my case.

Will charge me a reasonable fee and explain to

me, in advance, the basis of that fee.

Will be considerate and courteous at all times.

Will exercise judgments in my interest and not be biased by competing interests.

Will inform me periodically about the status of

the case and, at my request, provide copies of

documents prepared.

Will exhibit a high degree of ethical conduct.

Will refer me to other legal counsel if he or she

cannot adequately represent me.

The five books of The "People Power" Law-Government-Media-Politics Superbook are:

Book 1. Law Guide; Law Job Guide (Legal Knowledge, Most Types of Law, World Law; Law Career, Lawyer, Paralegal, Legal Assistant, Scopist, Legal Research, Court Reporting, Judge, Law Librarian)

Book 2. Government Guide, Government Job Guide (Federal, State, County, Municipal, World Government Websites, Government Selling Stuff, Government Grants, Government Jobs, Canadian Government Info-Jobs)

Book 3. Journalism Career Guide-Media Guide

(Journalist Jobs-Schools, Worldwide List of TV, Radio, Newspapers, Magazines, Etc.)

Book 4. Politics Guide

Book 5. Activist Guide (Why Care About Anything Beyond Yourself? What Really Matters Anyway)

Government Guide, Government Job Guide (Federal – State – County – Municipal - World Governments, Government Sales – Grants)

The "People Power" Education Superbook

Government Guide, Government Job Guide (Federal – State – County – Municipal - World Governments, Government Sales – Grants)

Government Introduction

The government is huge as the primary decision-maker and economic power of any country, province, state, county, city, town or village but there are no books offering basic, generic government information except for a few big ones by Gale Group (gale.com) and other reference book publishers selling for hundreds of dollars each.

This is a resource book with some explanations in it but that's not the priority. The priority is resources.

firstgov.gov is the federal government network.

For information on the web about any state government department, use the following formula:

state.two letter abbreviation.us, for example:

state.al.us for Alabama.

Look for the department you're interested in.

Another one is the name of the state followed by .gov, .org, .net and .com like hawaii.gov, hawaii.org, etc.

For most government information, look through your local phonebook in four separate government sections:

Municipal.

County.

State.

Federal.

Government books at the library are as follows:

350. Public Administration.

351. Central governments.

352. Local governments.

353. U.S. federal and state governments.

354. Other central governments.

355. Military administration.

356. Foot forces, army, marines, etc.

357. Mounted forces.

358. Armored, technical, air, space.

359. Navy.

For the Library of Congress System, try G7212 at the library.

Volume 1. American Government Websites

Chapter 1. United States Government Info 1

U.S. Government Introduction

To navigate the system, the main book is the U.S. Government Manual, a complete guide to all departments, agencies and offices of the federal government.

You can buy one at one of the 24 U.S. government bookstores located around the country or you can look it over at the library or the Federal Information Center (fic.info.gov) nearest to you.

Try your local library or Superintendent of Documents (gpo.gov/su_docs) for smaller telephone directories.

Books about the federal government are located at #353 of your local library.

Generally, if you're not sure of where to go, just use your common sense and contact the relevant department for directions and general information, for example, the Department of Commerce for business, Department of State for information about different countries, Environmental Protection Agency for hazardous wastes and the National Institute For Health for medical matters.

Whenever you talk to these people, be nice to them and they will help you more than if you just demand information as though it was your right. Human emotions are the bottom line to getting service with anyone. Treat them with respect and they will respond accordingly.

Many federal agencies have enforcement and/ or complaint-handling duties for products and services used by the general public. Others act for the benefit of the public but do not resolve

individual consumer problems.

Agencies also have fact sheets, booklets and other information which might be helpful in making purchase decisions and dealing with consumer problems.

Try your local phonebook to see if a local office of the particular department you're interested in exists in your area.

If you need help in deciding where to go with your problem, call the nearest Federal Information Center.

Federal Information Home Page

fie.com

usa.gov/contact/directories.shtml

governmentmailinglists.com

government-mailing-lists.com

usa.gov/agencies/federal/all_agencies/index.shtml, u.s. government departments and agencies usa.gov/topics/reference_shelf.shtml, firstgov reference; federal laws, regulations, maps, forms and more

ehow.com, how to find a list of federal employees

access.gpo.gov/su_docs

gpo.lib.purdue.edu

pueblo.gsa.gov

Governement documents.

Federal Government Operator

202-655-4000

202-225-3121

U.S. Congress

Congressional Research Service

Washington, DC 20515

202-224-3121

202-225-7000

house.gov

Contact your congressman or senator or call the above number for information about Congress or the latest developments.

U.S. Senate

Washington, DC 20510

202-224-3121

202-224-2115

senate.gov

Smithsonian Dial A Museum

202-357-2000

si.edu

Washington's Events Hotline

202-Pa4-0009

White House Executive Orders

Daily Fax Line

Fax: 202-395-9088

The federal government employs many people to write relevant, practical booklets and full fledged books about things that matter in life and the topics are not necessarily related to government matters.

They're just good, basic information about things American citizens need to help make life easier. Some of these publications are free, some cost a modest fee.

There are two major sources for all this information:

Consumer Information Center

Pueblo, Co 81009

888-8pueblo

Fax: 719-948-9724

pueblo.gsa.gov

Get the free Consumer's Resource Handbook and The Publications Catalog.

Superintendent of Documents

U.S. Government Printing Office

Washington, Dc 20402

202-512-1800

Fax: 202-512-1716

bybsys@access.digex.net

access.gpo.gov/su_docs

Every year they put out a Subject Bibliography Index which is the index bible of U.S. government information. You contact them, they send it to you for free. This little booklet contains over a hundred categories/ fields/ topics. You merely check off the topics you're interested in and they send you the Subject Bibliographies for each of these topics which describe the publications they're offering.

You decide what you want and order from them. It's inexpensive for some of the information you get.

They also have a catalog called U.S. Government Subscriptions which lists all the daily, weekly, monthly magazines/ newsletters the federal government publishes on a regular basis. Ask for it.

National Audiovisual Center

8700 Edgeworth Dr.

Capitol Heights, Md 20743

301-763-1896.

ntis.gov/ nac

The National Audiovisual Center, a central source for all audiovisual material produced by the U.S. Government, rents and sells material on jobs and careers. Ask for a catalog.

National Technical Information Service

Springfield, Va 22161

800-553-Ntis

ntis.gov/database

Sells publications on most areas of life, free catalog.

grc.ntis.gov, government research center

subscription service for several information

databases; government, science, occupational

safety, agriculture, etc.

Some resource books for any facet of the

American government be it federal, state, county, municipal is the following book:

Omingraphics, Inc.

Penobscot Bldg.,

Detroit, Mi 48226

800-234-1340

ominigraphics.com

Government Phone Book Usa: A Comprehensive Guide To Federal, State, County & Local Government Offices In The United States

United States Websites

100bestvacations.com, travel info mailed to you free.

1800-ustravel.com

2havefun.com

50states.com

50usastates.com

800-ustravel.com

accessamer.com

adventuretravel.about.com/od/northamericanadventures

aegis.com/countries/us.html

alamy.com/showcase/default.asp, travel pictures.

allexperts.com/travel/states/states.shtml

amazon.com, book best places northwest.

americanlegacy.org

americansouthwest.net

american-travel.net

americantravelsites.com/

americanwest.com

amwest-travel.com, american west.

areaguides.net

armchair.com, usa tourist bureaus

aviewofamerica.com

aviewofamerica.com

bbb.org/library/travel

blueridgecountry.com

bubl.ac.uk/link/u/unitedstatestravelandtourism.htm

budgettravel.com

budgettravel.com/usa.htm

capecod.net

capecodonline.com

cass.etsu.edu/n&t/guidelin.html, appalachia.

census.gov

census.gov

cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/us.html

city.net/countries/united_states/

clickcity.com

concierge.com

cruising-america.com

cyberwest.com, american west.

dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/fea/travel/unitedstates/stories/

desertusa.com, southwest.

digitalcity.com/travel/

dir.yahoo.com/regional/u_s__states

dmoz.org/regional/north_america/united_states/hawaii/travel_and_tourism/

eccentricamerica.com eccentricamerica.com/links.htm

ego.com/us

emilebymile.com/main/united_states

emilebymile.com/main/us/

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/united_states

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/united_states_of_america

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/united_states_of_america

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/united_states_wine

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/western_united_states

encarta.msn.com

e-referencedesk.com/resources/state infousanet.com

e-referencedesk.com/resources/state-symbols

e-referencedesk.com/resources/state-symbols

escapetothesoutheast.com

everythingabouttravel.com/unitedstatestravel.html

excel.net/~security/

excite.com/travel/countries/united_states

exitsource.com, lists services near interstate exits.

explorer1.com, travel guide for northern california, southern oregon and western nevada.

exploringthenorth.com

externalharddrive.com/travel/usa-states/

findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_go1568/is_200406/ai_n6309040, america: off the beaten track.

firstgov.gov, the u.s. government's official web portal.

firstgov.gov/citizen/topics/travel.shtml

goamericanwest.com

gonewengland.about.com

go-northamerica.com

gonorthwest.com

gorptravel.gorp.com

gosw.about.com

gosw.about.com, southwest.

gosw.about.com, southwest.

gosw.about.com/od/resortsandtours, southwest.

great-lakes.net/tourism

guidebookamerica.com/

guidebookamerica.com/

hdr.undp.org/statistics/data/cty/cty_f_usa.html

historic66.com

historicnewengland.org

hm-usa.com

hm-usa.com/states infoseek.go.com, search engine,

honeymoons.about.com, lots of travel info.

honeymoons.about.com/od/exploretheusa

hputx.edu/howardpayne.aspx?pgid=1773

iexplore.com/dmap/united+states/link

infowest.com

interstateamerica.com

jnlcom.com, north carolina, tennessee.

jus4funusa.com/

kcls.org/hh/unitedstates.cfm

key-tourist-info.com

legendsofamerica.com

lewisandclark.com

lib.duke.edu/lilly/ushistcoll.htm

lib.umich.edu/govdocs/stsoc.html

lifeintheusa.com

local2me.org

local-travel.info

maintour.com

midwestliving.com, magazine.

midwestliving.com/travel

mit.edu/geo, which counties cities or towns are in.

museumstuff.com

my-americaguide.com

mytripjournal.com

nara.gov, archives.

national.sidewalk.msn.com

nationsonline.org/oneworld/united_states.htm

neas.miis.edu/resources-united-states.html

newengland.com

nwsource.com/travel, northwest.

odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/us.ht

officialusa.com

officialusa.com

ohwy.com, online highways guide to travel, leisure and recreation in north america

ohwy.com, pacific northwest.

onetravel.com/uscanada/

outwestnewspaper.com

pacific101.com

pbs.org/destinationamerica

planetware.com/travel

realadventures.com/united-states.htm

respondweddings.com/listings/travel/united_states_travel_agencies.html

roadsideamerica.com

roadsideamerica.com

roadsideamerica.com

roadsidemagazine.com

roadtripamerica.com

roadtripdream.com

rockiesguide.com

rocky-mountains.org

scenic.org

search.ezilon.com/united_states/travel_and_tourism

seeamerica.org

shermanstravel.com

shorejournal.com, delmarva (delaware, naryland, virginia) peninsula.

skyauction.com

smalltownbrooklyn.com/villagegreen/coollinks/coollinks.html

soc.culture.usa

southeasternadventures.com

southernfolklore.com

summittravel.com, travel consultants.

sunset.com

symbolmagazine.com, southern lifestyle.

tatravelcenters.com, travel centers of america

thefunguides.com, books about tourist attractions.

thisisamerica.net

tidusa.com

tourstates.com

travel.discovery.com/destinations/unitedstates/unitedstates.html

travel.discovery.com/destinations/unitedstates/unitedstates.html

travel.nytimes.com/travel/guides/north-america/united-states/overview.html

travel.org/na, north america

travel.yahoo.com/p/travelguide/191501863

travel.yahoo.com/p-travelguide-191501863-united_states_vacations-i

travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/unitedstates

travel2.nytimes.com/top/features/travel/destinations/unitedstates

travel-america.co.uk

travelamerica.com

travel-easy.info

travelfleamarket.com

travel-hotels-usa.com

travelinfo.altervista.org/state_travel_information.html

travel-library.com/north_america/usa/

travel-library.com/north_america/usa/

travelmagazineusa.com

travelmagazineusa.com

travelmedia.com

travelnotes.org

travelnow.com

travelscrapper.com

traveltounitedstates.com

travelwest.net

travelwizard.com/unitedstates/

trekamerica.com

trekamerica.com

uk.holidaysguide.yahoo.com/p-travelguide-7618-united_states_travel_guide-i

united-publishers.com

unitedstates.areaguides.net

unitedstates.biz

united-states-of-earth.com

untraveledroad.com/usa

untraveledroad.com/usa

untraveledroad.com/usa.htm

uq.edu.au/zzdonsi/us_tips

usa.worldweb.com

usa.worldweb.com

usa-800.com

usajournal.com

usatoday.com/life/people

usatourism.com

usatourist.com

usaweb.com

usaweekend.com

usaweekend.com/03_issues/030518/030518springtravel.html, america's best places.

usaweekend.com/04_issues/040516/040516travel_fun.html

usps.gov/ncsc/lookups/lookup_zip+4

ustravelcenter.com

ustravelcenter.com

ustravelcenter.com

ustravelcenter.com

uwm.edu/library/docs/stats.html, statistical resources.

villageprofile.com, profiles many communities.

virtuallibrarian.com/it/states.html

virtualtourist.com/travel/north_america/united_states_of_america/travelguide-united_states_of_america.html

visitingnewengland.com

visit-usa.com

vtourist.com/north_america/usa

vtstravel.com, northeast.

wacvb.com, western assn. of convention and visitors bureaus.

wordtravels.com

worldslargestdoc.com

yahoo.com, zipcode icon at bottom of homepage.

yankeemagazine.com, new england.

zippythepinhead.com, roadside attractions.

Government Organization Websites

ncsl.org, national conference of state legislatures (ncsl).

naco.org, national association of counties (naco).

mtc.gov, multistate tax commission.

glc.org, great lakes commission.

Media Guide

The "People Power" Education Superbook

General Media Guide/ Journalism Career Guide

Media Introduction

This book is mostly a basic list of news, newspapers, magazines, radio and TV stations worldwide.

It's also a job book for the media industry.

Beyond the books in the employment section at the library at #331, you might find some books on journalism at #70-#71 and #384.55.

Find a list of the major newspapers in Editor And Publisher International Yearbook at the library.

The periodical directories list newpapers and magazines.

There is a list of newspaper websites elsewhere in this book.

At the library, journalism is at:

070. Journalism, Publishing.

071. In North America.

072. In the United Kingdom.

073. In Central Europe.

074. In France.

075. In Italy and area.

076. In Iberian Peninsula.

077. In Eastern Europe.

078. In Scandinavia.

079. In other countries.

Other than the main upfront so-called glamour jobs, there are many offshoot and technician jobs in these fields.

Jobs in these industries are generally on-the-job training. For instance, somebody might start out as a lowly clerk on the newsroom floor and

work up to news director.

In general, communications is considered a glamour industry because of the creativity involved so competition is fierce, even for people with advanced degrees.

I've known several people with journalism degrees who couldn't find a job so they ended up as high school teachers or something like that.

It's all about your ability with words. Newscasts have to be written everyday. They have to have fresh, new, exciting, crisp stories.

It takes a certain pragmatic skill to write good news copy quickly.

If you can get a story, summarize it down into your own words very quickly, edit news footage to go with it to create a quick story on the

nightly newscast, you will easily be in demand because these skills are rather rare.

People who do these jobs often get tired of the stress involved and quit. On the other hand, I heard of one talk show host who had two jobs in

different cities. He did his morning talk show, took a plane to the other city 150 miles away, did his evening show then took another plane

back.

He said he did it because the competition was so fierce. You don't know when you're going to work in this business so he was trying to build

up some security. He did it for eight years.

It never ends. If you do a good story for TV, newspaper or radio, so what, tomorrow you have to do it all over again. The public is

squeamish. They never let you rest on your laurels. If you aspire to create a quality media product like a good radio talk show, they will

expect it all the time.

The ratings drop quickly. I heard one radio talk show host who started out with an extensive summary of his own research every night but

then he got lazy and just spewed off a few mainstream media stories and expected his callers to entertain him and run the show. It didn't work. They got rid of him.

The bigtime journalists on CNN are such good entertainers/ journalists because they go into every show fully rehearsed and fully prepared.

They did their homework two times over before they ever stepped on stage. When 100, 000+people are watching you, you can't ever afford to be "off" for more than two seconds because they pick up on it which is why journalism is so tough, you have to be up and on all the time.

It's not an easy life. Today's news is already old news. You have to go for the next story. You can get tunnel vision working in this field giving your life over to mass media, losing yourself in the process.

There are four types of jobs in television; administration, programming, sales and technical.

You have to be energetic and aggressive to land a job. In a newsroom, you might start as a writer and reporter going to all the small jobs,

taking a day to report on a story that gets two minutes airtime. You might go out alone with just a camera that you set up yourself.

Anchor people read from a prompter yet it's considered a glamour job. They're not journalists but it's a big time competitive deal.

You have to find an agent who will get you a job in a small market and from that, you will hopefully get a job with one of the few big city

markets around and that's it, you read the news everyday whether you feel good or bad. You have to help write the news script too.

It's really a tough job if you don't have the right personality. You're not an individual, you're just an automat doing a tightly regulated job.

Then, because you're considered a local celebrity, you have to go to local functions and act like a cool, happenin', dignified person. It's a job for egomaniacs. There are also several behind the scenes production jobs.

Radio is almost identical except that the prima donnas are the disc jockeys and the talk show hosts. Only a few of these make it big though.

Because there are so many DJs around, the job is relatively low paying. Talk is cheap too.

Many radio talk hosts are just low paid, generic blab artists. People get tired of them all except for the few original ones. In either case, you

need your audition tape and try to get a local job to work your way onto a network.

You can either get a job through an agent or by canvassing radio stations yourself. If you're really aggressive, you will go out and find advertisers to sponsor you for a radio show then present yourself to a radio station. Go to your library and get the several different annual broadcaster's/ media directories for lots of information.

Newspaper jobs come down to your ability to write. Beyond your journalism degree, you should have been on the high school newspaper

staff. Magazines are either trade or consumer.

There's writing, editing, photojournalism, art department, advertising, sales, administrative, etc. You have to start at the bottom and work

your way up.

Most states have newspaper and media associations that can help you find a job.

Names and locations of newspapers and a list of schools and departments of journalism are published in the Editor and Publisher

International Year Book, available in most public libraries and newspaper offices.

For general information about careers in journalism, contact:

Association for Education in Journalism and

Mass Communication

1621 College St.

University of South Carolina

College of Journalism

Columbia, S.c. 29208-0251

sc.edu

Communications Websites

cencom.org/medialinks.aspx, center for

communication media links.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/communication,

communication overview.

americancomm.org, communication studies

center.

uiowa.edu/commstud/resources, communication

studies resources.

cwa-union.org, communications workers of

america.

fcc.gov/initiatives.html, emerging

communication technology.

fcc.gov, fcc; federal communication

commission.

aber.ac.uk/media/functions/mcs.html, media and communication studies site.

Politics Guide

The "People Power" Education Superbook

The Philosopher-King Politician: Virtually Non-Existent

Plato had a good idea when he said the wisest people should rule the land through his concept of the philosopher king in his book The Republic but the question is who are really the wise people? Is it the humble, intellectual monk or the wealthy capitalist? Who's to say the humble monk will not be seduced by power to become a tyrant?

The philosopher-king could be elected or could be a benevolent dictator. There are a few dictators around that are good to the people like the guy running Qatar.

The philosopher-king ALWAYS does the right thing to help the people.

He knows it's not about him or the elitist insiders who want to control the wealth and power. It's always about helping the people.

He will not spend money on the military just to fatten the military weapons manufacturers' wallets. If there is no threat such as in Canada where it has not been attacked since the War of 1812, the philospher-king would use that money on projects to help the people not to buy military ships, planes, etc.

He is not greedy and does not live in excess. He lives a modest life.

He has no cohorts, an elitist insider group, made up of greedy bitches and bastards all trying to control the people and get what they can for themselves which is common in virtually every government.

The philosopher-king commits to:

ethical, righteous behavior

equal justice for all, no special favors for elitists when it comes to breaking laws and moral codes

does what he says, keeps promises

strives to create a prosperous society

doesn't care what all his enemies say about him because he knows he's doing the right thing

doesn't care about compliments, has an inner vision of what is good and right, can't be swayed or seduced

listens to ideas and advice from anyone and everyone but always deliberates before making an independent decision

is patient, knows things take time to develop

treats the common people with respect

knows he's the inspirational and material leader of the country so he accepts the role and the responsibility to do it right

seeks the simplest, best solutions that will benefit the most people

strives to eradicate the most serious problems like homelessness, unemployment, care for disabled people and daycare for working parents

is not bullied by members of big business and media

makes moral judgments using the divine intuition his Creator gave him combined with the wisdom he got from life experience

takes risks to improve the country like building an expensive new road that will eventually pay off but not right away or invests in something like genetic engineering that will be the future someday but right now it's all risk

has a calm demeanour

lives in the moment, deals with current situations quickly

The philosopher king concept has been played out over and over again throughout history. It's just that the definition of the philosopher king has been bastardized to be the people who control the money in any society.

Since they control the money, they think they're intellectually superior to everyone else therefore as the elite few, they have a divine right to rule the lower classes.

The secret societies that have run the world for the past 2000 years were started based on Plato's idea of the philosopher king. It's just that their definition of the philosopher king is not some wise, benevolent, kindly, old man.

It's some arrogant, brash, capitalist who thinks because he controls the money, he's better and smarter than everyone else therefore entitled to rule.

At some point in time, voters get tired of virtually all incumbents because there are no great philosopher-kings doing things to really help the people like the guy in Qatar does. He's not elected but if he was, the people would give him landslide victories. He gives them free electricity, free college tuition, etc.

In contrast, politicians in the West are trying to get money to get re-elected and to put away for themselves.

We need philosopher-kings to run our countries. One way to do this is to lower the pay so much that only idealistic people will run for office.

We need compassionate, wise people with common sense not politicians who are bought and paid for by corporate interests.

Win an Election 1

The essence of American presidential leadership, and the secret of presidential success, is storytelling.

Evan Cornog, The Power and the Story: How the Crafted Presidential Narrative Has Determined Political Success from George Washington to George W. Bush

Follow their rules. Get your candidate application in on time.

Present yourself as somebody who wants to solve problems and help people.

Highlight your achievements but don't brag.

Engage in two-way dialogue. Get one website only. Don't get a website then do facebook too. Do it all on one website.

You could get twitter for your fans but it's arrogant to think other people give a damn about your daily tweets.

Invite people to send email questions. Answer them quickly.

Spend time online but you need to get in the mainstream media. Offer to do a show or a debate on your local Cable TV community channel.

Get on the news by any means necessary.

Walk the streets, knocking on doors to meet the people.

Organize local events, fund-raising events, rallies, etc.

Do not make hasty or offensive comments.

Be careful before you say hateful things about a group or your political opponents.

Do not discourage a difference of opinion. Be ready when someone opposes you. Y ou almost what questions your opponents might ask you. Have answers ready.

Deal with the issues people are mostly interested in.

If you really want to win in a less than noble way, do what the professional politicians do. They get their pollsters to see what the public opinion is on the issues then they parrot the majority ideas back.

Ensure that your site caters to all or most age groups and income groups with unique features for each that they may find interesting.

Through your website, constantly thank and motivate your volunteer campaign workers.

Always monitor the people to see what worked for you and what didn't as in giving a speech or on your website. Always change things that don't work.

Win an Election 2

At some point in time, voters get tired of virtually all incumbents because there are no great philosopher-kings doing things to really help the people like the guy in Qatar does. He's not elected but if he was, he would win. He gives them free electricity, free college tuition, etc. In contrast, us voters in the West see them all as phony scumbags, at least I do.

Certain traits will help you as a politician like:

male

tall, over six feet

Over 35, under 65

Married.

Military veteran.

Christian or Jewish

Already a public figure for something or celebrity

You have to be tough and willing to work hard. Election campaigns are long and tedious.

You have to grovel for campaign money.

You and your family will be investigated by journalists and the opposition parties to get dirt on you or anything that makes a good story.

You have to be able to talk well to people.

Have a successful career.

Have money already.

Being a politician means you must do lots of things you do not want to do.

Most likely you will have to sell your soul and do flip-flops based on what your campaign people tell you after they do their research on the issues.

You can be a maverick and make a stand for a certain set of issues but for some issues, you can't go against what the majority feels and win. Legalizing drugs or banning abortion would lose a lot of votes right about now.

It could be hard to beat a sitting politician. The best times are when the incumbent retires or is thrown out due to a scandal.

You need to raise money for your campaign to get the word out about you.

Set up your own website and a twitter account to send messages to followers. You could set up on facebook or simply stick to your own website. Develop an email mailing list to send emails to your friends.

Sometimes you have to bide your time and wait until your opposition is weak or you could be like the young guy in Newark, NJ who ran against the old guy, lost but in the process, he established himself as the new guy and won the next time.

You may need people like advisors, a communications director, strategist, marketing director, campaign finance committee chairman, campaign coordinators, paid staffers and volunteers.

Campaign expenses are:

Advertising in the media.

Sending direct mail.

Paid campaign staff.

Office space, telephones, travel, good clothes, food, internet, yard signs, bumper stickers, etc.

Raise money any way you can that's legal.

Federal law limits ordinary citizens to contributions of $2,000 each.

You could find some political action committees (PACs) that favor your candidacy. PACs can contribute $5,000 per candidate for every election and they can create and run advertisements on your behalf.

Form a campaign finance committee. Appoint a treasurer and board of directors and file forms with the Federal Election Commission at fec.gov.

If you get elected, you owe your contributors favors.

Contact your election commission or party organization for the requirements on how to be a candidate.

There might be a primary where you compete against others in your party for the nomination.

Be energetic.

Get a simple, clear message out.

Identify your supporters and offer to drive them out to vote.

Use campaign management software.

Your opponents will try to bash you any way they can.

Lie about promises because everybody does but don't lie about things that can easily be checked up on. One guy said he played college football. They checked it out with the college and there was no record of him playing there. He quit the election.

Stay in the middle.

Don't show anger or anxiety.

Negative campaigning works. I see politicians do petty things all the time. If the other guy does something that's none of your business like sleep around, if you're a noble guy or girl, you don't care. That has got nothing to do with political ideas but your campaign manager will say we have to attack this guy as an immoral piece of crap.

Some things are downright character assassination like they tried to portray one guy as a guy a with foreign interests because he spent the past 20 years working outside of his Native country where he was running for office. It worked. He lost. I watched the winner act like nothing happened, like he won on his merit but deep down he must have known he just assassinated an innocent guy who did nothing bad. He was a professor at a foreign university. They made him look like a foreign agent.

How Bills Become Laws

washlaw.edu/uslaw/statelaw.html, state and federal government and legislative information, including statutes for most states.

thomas.loc.gov/home/lawsmade.toc.html, electronic version of a booklet designed to help the american people better understand how legislation is enacted by congress.

General List of Political Ideologies

A democracy is simple majority rule.

A republic starts with the notion that all people have certain inalienable rights and corresponding responsibilities that cannot be removed, unless they violate someone else's inalienable right, even by a majority vote.

Roughly speaking, these are the major political ideologies:

anarchism

buddhism

christianity

conservatism

democratic socialism

environmentalism

fascism

feminism

hinduism

islam

judaism

liberalism

libertarianism

marxism

nationalism

radicalism

reformist socialism

religion

religious socialism

revolutionary socialism

sikhism

social anarchism

social democracy

socialism

zionism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/african_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/agorism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/agrarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/anarcha-feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/anarchism_without_adjectives

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/anarchist_communism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/anarcho-capitalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/anarcho-liberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/anarcho-pacifism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/anarcho-primitivism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/anarcho-syndicalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/anti-revisionism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/arab_nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/arab_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/austrofascism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/austromarxism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/autarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/autonomism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/autonomist_marxism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/baathism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/bernsteinism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/bioconservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/black_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/black_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/black_nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/bolivarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/brazilian_integralism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/bright_green_environmentalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/buddhist_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/buddhist_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/category:political_ideologies

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/category:political_parties

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/chinese_nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/christian_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/christian_communism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/christian_democracy

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/christian_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/christian_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/civic_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/classical_liberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/clerical_fascism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/collectivist_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/communism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/communitarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/conservatism_in_australia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/conservatism_in_canada

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/conservatism_in_colombia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/conservatism_in_germany

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/conservatism_in_north_america

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/conservatism_in_the_united_states

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/conservative_liberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/corporatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/council_communism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/cultural_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/cultural_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/cultural_liberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/deep_ecology

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/democratic_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/distributism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/dominionism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/eco-capitalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ecofascism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ecofeminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ecologism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/economic_liberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/eco-socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/environmentalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/eurocommunism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/fabianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/falangism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/fascism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/fiscal_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/free-market_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/free-market_environmentalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/freiwirtschaft

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/gaullism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/geolibertarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/georgism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/greek_fascism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/green_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/green_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/green_liberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/green_libertarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/green_municipalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/green_politics

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/green_syndicalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/guevarism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/guild_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/hindu_nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/hoxhaism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/illegalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/inclusive_democracy

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/indigenism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/individualist_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/individualist_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/infoanarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/insurrectionary_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/internationalism_(politics)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/irish_nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/iron_guard

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/islamic_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/islamic_democracy

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/islamic_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/islamic_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/islamism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/italian_fascism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/japanese_fascism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/jewish_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/jewish_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/kautskyism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/khalistan_movement

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/labor_zionism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/latin_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/left_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/left_communism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/left-libertarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/left-wing_nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/left-wing_politics

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/leninism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/lesbian_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/liberal_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/liberal_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/liberal_nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/liberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/liberation_theology

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/liberation_theology

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/libertarian_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/libertarian_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/libertarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/libertarianism#neolibertarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/list_of_ideologies_named_after_people

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/list_of_political_parties_by_country

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/list_of_political_parties_by_ideology

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/list_of_political_parties_by_united_nations_geoscheme

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/luxemburgism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/main_page

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/makhnovism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/maoism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/market_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/market_liberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/market_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/marxism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/marxist_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/marxist_humanism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/marxist_revisionism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/masculism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/melanesian_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/minarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/multi-party_system

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/mutualism_(economic_theory)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/national_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/national_liberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/national_syndicalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/national-anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/nazism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/neoconservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/neo-fascism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/neoliberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/neo-marxism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/neosocialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/non-partisan_democracy

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/objectivism_(ayn_rand)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ordoliberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/paleoconservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/paleoliberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/paleolibertarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/pan-africanism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/panarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/pan-iranism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/participatory_economics

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/patriotism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/peronism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/platformism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/political_catholicism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/politics

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/popolarismo

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/portal:politics

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/post-anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/post-colonial_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/post-left_anarchy

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/postmodern_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/privatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/producerism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/progressivism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/propertarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/provo_(movement)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/psychoanalytic_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/queer_nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/radical_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/radicalism_(historical)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/really_really_free_market

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/reformism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/religious_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/religious_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/religious_zionism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/republicanism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/revisionist_zionism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/revolutionary_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/rexism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/right-anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/right-libertarianism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/roman_catholic_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/romantic_nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/separatist_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/single-party_state

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/situationism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/social_anarchism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/social_capitalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/social_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/social_democracy

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/social_ecology

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/social_liberalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/socialism_with_chinese_characteristics

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/socialist_feminism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/syncretic_politics

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/syndicalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/template_talk:party_politics

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/template_talk:political_ideologies

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/theoconservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/third_way

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/titoism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/traditionalist_conservatism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/trotskyism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/two-party_system

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/utopian_socialism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/voluntaryism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/western_marxism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/white_nationalism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/womanism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/workerism

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/zbor

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/zionism

Political One-Liners

Nothing in politics ever happens by accident. If it happens, you can bet it was planned that way.

Franklin D. Roosevelt

The world is governed by people far different from those imagined by the public.

Benjamin Disraeli

I think we need people to rule who are like Plato's Philospher King, wise people who feel they must rule because they're the only pure, noble people in society not capitalist pigs who run for office for money and fame.

The job of our elected representatives is to sign legislations written by lobbyists working for those special interests who pay for their election.

We must separate politics from religion and corporate profit.

Religion is bad in politics because it tolerates no rival or competition of any kind. A Christian must be pro-life and anti-stem-cell research. There's no room for individual analysis.

Why Power Corrupts Almost Everybody

These are points I got from reading a social science analysis of power.

People in power don't actually give a damn about you: they are too busy thinking about themselves.

People put into power positions stop thinking about others or what they think. They feel superior and elitist.

Feeling powerful makes it easier to lie because almost nobody will question you and you feel entitled to lie anyway because you know what's best.

When you're treated like a bigshot, you feel untouchable and much less guilt than a regular Joe. Fatcats can lie much smoother than other people.

It's almost as if the feeling of being in power makes them think the normal rules of morality didn't apply to them.

Power and hypocrisy are linked in the brain. These brain areas are close to each other. They help each other.

Nobody gives average people a break. They only give breaks to people that are powerful or can give them something back.

Power hungry leaders look down upon the people they should be serving. Good leaders put others first.

To be in a position of power you must be willing to step over whoever you can to get there, making most people with power innately corrupt and open to abusing it.

Power makes a person think that the rules do not apply to him or her.

Powerless people are more self-critical than others.

It's not all bad. Other studies show that people with power see the world more positively and are therefore more likely to take risks based on faith.

The Stranglehold of Two Parties

Most politicians are worried about staying in power way more than doing something to help people.

Everywhere I look nowadays, I see splinter groups away from the mainstream mindset promoting their own interests which is a good thing.

I also watch the internet activists express their own views about what's happening in life away from the generic pablum on TV but it still hasn't broken the stranglehold the two major political parties have on the American government and many other governments worldwide.

In any American election, all the other political parties combined barely get more than one to five percent of the vote be it federal, state or local. This is bad for democracy and freedom, when two political parties control all the power.

It's not the people that are freely voting this way. It's the media which portrays every political party beyond the big two as a trivial, fringe party not worthy of consideration. They don't give them a chance. They don't even allow their leaders on the presidential debates on TV.

At the very least, there should be four or more major political parties in the United States that each have the potential to get enough votes to conceivably win any election. This would be closer to a true democracy but the system is so entrenched that it's rigged against anyone beyond the big two.

As of now, it's an oligarchy, rule by the wealthy few who fit the generic, staid image both the Republicans and the Democrats want, someone who looks good but doesn't say much of anything with originality and vision to it.

This is one of the things I'm strongly against, this brainwash that the Republicans and the Democrats are the only two political parties who have the power therefore the only ones that count.

It's like a choice between two duds, Tweedle-dee and Tweedle-dum. What good does that do when none of them are very good because there's no accountability since they know they will always be taking turns? That's the way the system currently works.

The truth is that in the backrooms in Washington, they're friends. They know they're the powerful few so despite all the games they play for public consumption, ultimately, it's all about them protecting their own interests along with their big business lobbying buddies, not about helping common people live better lives.

They're not out to help the common people. They're out to sell their power to the lobbying special interest groups.

Political Science Websites

swift.eng.ox.ac.uk/jdr, political theory on the internet

swift.eng.ox.ac.uk/jdr/classic.html, classical political theorists

swift.eng.ox.ac.uk/jdr/moder1.html, modern political theorists from machiavelli to locke

swift.eng.ox.ac.uk/jdr/modern.html, modern political theorists from burke to marx

swift.eng.ox.ac.uk/jdr/contemp.html, contemporary political theory

lib.uconn.edu/polisci/polisci.htm, political science

w3.org/pub/datasources/bysubject/politics/overview.html

indiana.edu/~libsalc/goehlert/polisci.html, political science resources

blair.library.rhodes.edu/pshtml

s/psnet.html, political science internet resources

keele.ac.uk/depts/po/theory.htm, political theory

keele.ac.uk/depts/po/thought.htm, political thought

n2h2.com/kovacs/s0052s.html, philosophical, political

science and ethics

riceinfo.rice.edu/11/subject/government, government, political science and law

Speech Writer/ Speechwriter

Speechwriters work mostly for politicians but also work for other bigshots like business types and pop culture celebrities.

For a politician and everyone else for that matter, the speechwriter has to talk to the group who either invited the politician or where he or she is campaigning in advance, get a feel for them then whip off the speech at least two days before the event to give the politician time to practice it.

If you want to be a speechwriter, volunteer for a campaign and start writing speeches for your candidate. Most volunteers want to be at events but don't want to write speeches.

jobprofiles.org/govfspeechwriter.htm

ifreelance.com/freelance-jobs/speech-writing-freelance-jobs/

careerbuilder.com/jobs/keyword/speech/writer

hubpages.com/hub/find-freelance-writing-jobs-as-a-freelance-speech-writer

writingcareer.com/articles/what-is-freelance-speech-writing.php

payscale.com/research/us/job=speech_writer/salary

speech-writers.com

salary.com/careers

thespeechwriter.typepad.com

employment911.com, senior speech writer jobs search

nwu.org, national writers union job hotline.

moneyfromhome.com/job_data/speech_writers_98981.htm

yourspeechwriter.com, professional speech

writing service

washingtondc.craigslist.org/doc/ofc/, washington, dc, office jobs.

online-writing-jobs.com/jobs/freelance-speech-writing-jobs.php

hotjobs.yahoo.com

coe.west.asu.edu/students/jkoenig/webquest/elections/job.htm, speech writer job description.

simplyhired.com, speechwriter-jobs/

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The five books of The "People Power" Law-Government-Media-Politics Superbook are:

Book 1. Law Guide; Law Job Guide (Legal Knowledge, Most Types of Law, World Law; Law Career, Lawyer, Paralegal, Legal Assistant, Scopist, Legal Research, Court Reporting, Judge, Law Librarian)

Book 2. Government Guide, Government Job Guide (Federal, State, County, Municipal, World Government Websites, Government Selling Stuff, Government Grants, Government Jobs, Canadian Government Info-Jobs)

Book 3. Journalism Career Guide-Media Guide

(Journalist Jobs-Schools, Worldwide List of TV, Radio, Newspapers, Magazines, Etc.)

Book 4. Politics Guide

Book 5. Activist Guide (Why Care About Anything Beyond Yourself? What Really Matters Anyway)