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INTRODUCTION!
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START DEBATE!
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EDUCATION!
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REVOLUTIONARY WAR!
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CONSTITUTION-SUPER IMPORTANT!
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LAWYER YEARS
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In 1784, I took on the Rutgers v. Waddington case, which involved the rights of Loyalists. It was a landmark case for the American justice system, as it led to the creation of the judicial review system. In defending the Loyalists, Hamilton instituted new principles of due process.-Argument for why he helped loyalists. That same year I assisted in founding the Bank of New York. In defending the Loyalists, Hamilton instituted new principles of due process. I also helped to get the Trespass Act repealed.
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CONSITUTIONAL CONVENTION
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SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY: When George Washington was elected president of the United States in 1789, he appointed me as the first secretary of the treasury. The nation was facing great debts due to the Revolution which I proposed a solution to that included fiscal policies which would initiate the payment of federal war bonds, had the federal government assume states' debts, would institute a federal system for tax collection and would help the United States establish credit with other nations. I reached a compromise with fellow delegates who feared a return to tyranny because of Federalist ideologies, to place the nations capital in Washington D.C. and Madison would no longer block Congress from approving policies that promoted a more powerful central government over individual states' rights.
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RESPONSE TO AFFAIR WITH MARIA REYNOLD'S AND MARRIAGE
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BAD- HE BELIEVED COMMON PEOPLE WERE TOO GOVERNED BY PASSIONS AND SHOULDN'T EVEN BE ALLOWED TO VOTE-The reason that Hamilton believed this was because he wanted to support a stable government that was united not separated by emotional opinions.
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MARTIN WASN'T EVEN HIS REAL NAME-1. King’s birth name was Michael, not Martin.
The civil rights leader was born Michael King Jr. on January 15, 1929. In 1934, however, his father, a pastor at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, traveled to Germany and became inspired by the Protestant Reformation leader Martin Luther. As a result, King Sr. changed his own name as well as that of his 5-year-old son. Was never legally changed. |
King was jailed 29 times.
According to the King Center, the civil rights leader went to jail nearly 30 times. He was arrested for acts of civil disobedience and on trumped-up charges, such as when he was jailed in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1956 for driving 30 miles per hour in a 25-mile-per-hour zone. |
PLAGIARIZING-During the 1980s, archivists associated with The Martin Luther King Papers Project uncovered evidence that the dissertation King prepared for his Ph.D. in theology from Boston University, “A Comparison of the Conception of God in the Thinking of Paul Tillich and Henry Nelson Wieman,” was plagiarized, and a committee of scholars at Boston University concluded that Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. plagiarized portions of his doctoral dissertation, completed there in the 1950s. The committee found that King “is responsible for knowingly misappropriating the borrowed materials that he failed to cite or to cite adequately.” It found a pattern of appropriation of uncited material “that is a straightforward breach of academic norms and that constitutes plagiarism as commonly understood.”
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CONCLUSION:
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QUOTES!
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