Gerrymandering is the process of drawing Congressional districts to support a particular political party. It is named after Massachusetts Governor Elbridge Gerry, whose 1812 creation of a politically favorable district had the appearance of a salamander.
Multiple sub-domains may be present in an email address, but they must be arranged hierarchically and conclude with a valid top-level domain. Since "wdc" is not a top-level domain, it cannot be used in an email address.
"Neither slavery nor involuntary work, unless as punishment for crime whereof the party may have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or anywhere subject to their jurisdiction," reads Amendment XIII, Section 1, which was ratified on December, 1865. Congress is given the authority to execute Section 1 under Section 2.
Roosevelt claimed that "adherence of the United States to the Monroe Doctrine may push the United States... to the use of a worldwide police authority," which he used to defend American intervention in Latin American nations under threat from European powers. This became known as the Monroe Doctrine's Roosevelt Corollary.
Products for national security are categorized as a public benefit by economists. One person's consumption of public schools, which are provided for the benefit of society as a whole, does not have an impact on the amount that other people can consume. Politicians make decisions on how much of any public good should be produced, not individual consumers.
To provide the President with unbiased evaluations of domestic and global economic challenges, the CEA was founded in 1946.