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Originally posted by Hastobemoretolife
It just passed the house right?
It still has the senate to go through before it goes to the presidents desk right?
PART I--PROGRAMS FOR ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY STUDENTS
`SEC. 111. ASSISTANCE TO STATES, TERRITORIES, AND INDIAN TRIBES.
`(a) Purpose- School-based service learning programs promote service-learning as a strategy to--
`(1) support high-quality service-learning projects that engage students in meeting community needs with demonstrable results, while enhancing students' academic and civic learning; and
`(2) support efforts to build institutional capacity, including the training of educators, and to strengthen the service infrastructure to expand service opportunities.
Originally posted by MajesticJax
It's only for the study of the feasability of the mandatory servitude.
However, it is one step closer to the actual implementation of such a program.
Originally posted by ACEMANN
Originally posted by MajesticJax
It's only for the study of the feasability of the mandatory servitude.
However, it is one step closer to the actual implementation of such a program.
I'm pretty sure the Gov't will find mandatory unpaid labor works pretty well..
Originally posted by Clearskies
reply to post by dgtempe
Exactly!
I am worried about this passing.
Why can't they focus on the economy, instead of this program for inner cities, and stem cell research???
Originally posted by dgtempe
Is this for the forced MANDATORY
VOLUNTEERS, communist style?????
Get ready for the camp!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
The Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution officially abolished and continues to prohibit slavery and involuntary servitude, except as punishment for a crime. It was adopted on December 6, 1865, and was then declared in a proclamation of Secretary of State William H. Seward on December 18.
At the time of its ratification, slavery remained legal only in Delaware, Kentucky and Missouri. In New Jersey, former slaves born before 1804 could still legally be held as "apprentices," a condition essentially equivalent to slavery; former border slave state Maryland had banned slavery in the constitution it had passed the previous year. Everywhere else in the United States slaves had been freed by state action or Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation.
Lincoln and others were concerned that the Emancipation Proclamation would be seen as a temporary war measure, and so, besides freeing slaves in those states where slavery was still legal, they supported the Amendment as a means to guarantee the permanent abolition of slavery.
The Thirteenth Amendment is the first of the Reconstruction Amendments.
Originally posted by dgtempe
reply to post by Essan
You need to wake up friend, and see the real consequences of this.