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Troyanec [42]
3 years ago
8

What prevented the Communist Chinese from invading Taiwan and completely defeating the Nationalists?

Social Studies
2 answers:
Lina20 [59]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

The United States did not allow them to do so.

Explanation:

DedPeter [7]3 years ago
3 0
<span>Some of the factors that prevent China from invading Taiwan are that it is located in a strategic shipping route.  The United States of America can quickly send a fleet if such an invasion took place.  Taiwan is under the United States of America interest in the Pacific.  This was seen when President Harry Truman sent a fleet to prevent the Chinese from invading what was left of Chiang Kai Shek’s forces.  Today the U.S. is still on the alert and even the Chinese would not risk going to war if it would lead to involving the Americans.</span>
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Long answer questions: 1. "We all are Nepali, even though we are diverse in ability, sex, religion, culture and language." Justi
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Answer:ok

Explanation:INTRODUCTION

Are fundamental rights, the sort of rights entrenched in written constitutions

and human rights instruments, binding on individuals or other private

actors? With few exceptions, most legal systems of the constitutional

democratic type answer this question in the negative. The German Basic

Law, for example, provides in article 1(3) that ‘constitutional rights bind the

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Direct and Indirect Effects of Fundamental Rights

2

corporations, labor unions and the like. Similarly, the Fourteenth

Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that ‘no State shall

make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of

citizens of the United States’. The U.S. Supreme Court built a notoriously

large and obscure body of case law on top of this seemingly harmless

provision ― the basis of the so-called ‘state action doctrine’ ― the gist of it

being that constitutional rights do not bind private actors unless they are

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produce not only ‘vertical’ but ‘horizontal’ effect as well.

But this is hardly the end of the story. Even if fundamental rights

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plaintiff cannot base her complaint on the defendant’s violation of a

constitutional entitlement or that the defendant cannot invoke a

constitutional liberty to evade liability ― they are fully operative against the

state in its capacity as law-maker, law-executor and law-enforcer. Imagine

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term in the lease that placed the latter under an obligation to go to church

every weekend and to decorate the premises with religious paraphernalia.

While the doctrine of vertical effect bars the tenant from invoking freedom of

religion against the landlord, he may do so against the court itself qua

enforcer of the lease and against the legislature qua author of the laws which

empower private parties to create legal obligations inconsistent with freedom

of religion. If the laws in question are indeed unconstitutional, they must be

regarded as void. At the end of the day, the tenant will win the case precisely

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against the landlord. The only difference is procedural: the rejection of

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landlord. One way or another, the outcome is exactly the same

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