| Tyson | I'd like some euros <a href=" http://www.kpopfancafe.com/home/clotrimazole-betamethasone-cream-uses.pdf#alike ">betamethasone valerate 0.05 uses</a> Democracy is nice, but it is not a panacea. The American insistence that the world mimic us â ainât we pretty close to poifect? â has always struck me as both patronizing and contemptuous of history. The overriding challenge of all incipient democracies is how to handle minority issues. For a very long time, the U.S. did not do very well in this regard. We disenfranchised African-Americans and used all sorts of devices to keep them in penury and politically powerless. It was the various democracies of the South that insisted on Jim Crow laws, and their representatives in Congress â many of whom loathed racial segregation â voted to maintain it lest they wind up losing at the polls. It took the often non-elected courts, Supreme or less so, to remedy the situation. The people are not always wise. <a href=" http://www.filmadvocacy.org/tadacip-alcohol.pdf ">cipla tadacip 20 side effects</a> As a group whoâve been on the job market for a while, the slightly-older millennials, those aged 25 to 31, seem as though they may be a bigger indicator of the countryâs economic healthâand this cohort may also show the sharpest contrast with their boomer parents. Within this group, 16% lived at home in 2012âdown slightly from 2011, but up from 13.8% in 2007, and from about 10% in 1981. A slower economy is certainly keeping many these adult kids from taking part in âhousehold formationââeconomist-speak for moving out and paying their own rent or mortgage. But changing marriage norms are also a factor. In 1981, about 43% of 18-to-31-year-olds (the core of the boomer generation) were married and had set up house on their own; today, only 23% fit that description. |
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