Week 7 EOC: Las Vegas Lawyers

10 Potential Lawyers for Final Project: 

Goldstein Law Offices, P.C.
Intellectual Property Lawyers Serving Las Vegas, NV (NationWide) 
www.goldsteinpatentlaw.com

Watson Rounds 
Intellectual Property Lawyers serving in  Las Vegas 
www.watsonrounds.com 

Preston Sterling Kerr
Intellectual Property Lawyers serving in Las Vegas 
www.sterlingkerrlaw.com

Colucci &Umans
Intellectual Property Lawyers serving in Las Vegas 
www.colucci-umans.com 

Nevada Law Group, Ltd
Contracts Lawyers in Las Vegas 
www.nevadalawgroup.com 

Hays, McCibb, Rice and Pickering, P.C.
Contracts Lawyers in Las Vegas 
www.haysmcconn.com 

Atkinson & Watkins, LLP 
Contracts Lawyers in Las Vegas 
www.atkinsonwatkinslaw.com

Rosenfeld & Associates
Contracts Lawyers Las Vegas 
www.lawrosen.com

Bowler Dixon & Twitchell LLP 
Cintracts Lawyers in Las Vegas 
www.bdtlawyers.com 

Esteban-Trinidad Law, P.C
Contracts Lawyers in Las Vegas
www.Itrinidadlaw.com


SOURCE USED TO FIND THESE RESOURCES:

www.findlaw.com 











Week 6 EOC: The Prayer

Prayer in Politics?

The Supreme Court, which heard a case last week aimed at banning prayer from government meetings, should allow it to continue, according to a Wall Street Journal editorial. 

(1.) "At stake is the survival of what the lawyers call 'legislative prayer,' and whether the courts should be in the business of deciding what kind of prayers pass muster," the Journal said Sunday.

In the case before the court last week, two women sued the town of Greece, N.Y., over a short prayer offered by a rotation of local religious leaders before the start of town board meetings.

The plaintiffs suggested that the prayers represent a government sanctioning of religion. The Second Circuit Court of suggested greed.

(2.)"By the court's logic, the First Amendment's dictate that 'Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion' means ending voluntary prayers that are led by citizens, unless those prayers are inclusive of the vast majority of world religions," the Journal said in reference to the case."
(3.)"Count us skeptical that the courts should examine the content of every prayer held at a town board meeting or judging whether a prayer could be considered too 'religious.'" 

So, the question is ;

What should the judgment standard be?
Is there a prayer Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus, and all various religions can agree upon? 

American was based on freedom of religion, not the forcemeat singular religion. 


 
Blog Source: