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Following the disclosure that the Biden administration suggested a $600 (now $10,000) barrier for bank account surveillance, many users on social media questioned if such a plan could be considered acceptable under the Fourth Amendment. They are not the first to inquire. In 1976, the issue of financial privacy was litigated all the way to the Supreme Court. The Court reasoned in United States v. Miller that a person cannot willingly submit information to a financial institution and expect that information to be protected by the Fourth Amendment. However, it's possible that it's time to revisit that decision.
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Sipping on a cool Budweiser or digging into a Whopper used to be the quintessential American pastime. However, those times are long gone.
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For several years, Chinese conglomerates have been buying stakes in American companies and real estate.
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While you may believe that the iconic American companies you see on a daily basis are wholly American, many are really owned by Chinese investors.
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If only the French elites had decided on a similar course of reform, there would have been no Terror, no Napoleon, and no centralizing, state revolution.
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The total amount owed by the United States to the federal government has topped $30 trillion. It's tough to grasp the magnitude of the problem even though we're all affected, but that's part of the problem. The following infographic gives a variety of viewpoints on how Americans' debt affects the economy, their personal finances, and the quality of life in the United States.
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For stating that 'natural law is morally superior to the force of the state,' Juan de Mariana was brought before the Inquisition and charged with treason.
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'The taxpayers are footing the bill.'
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In a 'growing danger' to the United States, Beijing signs a new contract to exchange nuclear technology, establish 5G networks, expand space programs, and push cheap loans into America's backyard.
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Disagreement over the definition of the term creates a chance to recover non-liberal realities.