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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Cold War
History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Soviet hegemony over Eastern Europe.
In the aftermath of World War II, the Soviet Union extended its political and military influence over Eastern Europe, in a move that was seen by some as a continuation of the older policies of the Russian Empire. Some territories that had been lost by Soviet Russia in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (1918) were annexed by the Soviet Union after WWII: the Baltic States and eastern portions of interwar Poland. The Russian SFSR also gained the ...
See also:History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Stalinist development, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Planning, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Industrialization in practice, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Collectivization, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Changes in Soviet society, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Purges, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Patriotic War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - War and Stalinist development, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Wartime developments, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Cold War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Soviet hegemony over Eastern Europe, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The tenor of Soviet-U.S. relations, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The breakdown of postwar peace, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Two visions of the world, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The beginning of the Cold War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Containment and the Marshall Plan, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Korean War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Notes, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - External link Read more here: » History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953: Encyclopedia II - History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Cold War |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Presidential facts
President of the United States - Transition events.
Four U.S. Presidents have been assassinated while in office:
Abraham Lincoln in 1865 by John Wilkes Booth
James Garfield in 1881 by Charles J. Guiteau (Guiteau shot him but Garfield arguably died due to subsequent incorrect medical care)
William McKinley in 1901 by Leon Czolgosz
John Kennedy in 1963, officially by Lee Harvey Oswald alone[2] although many theories suggest additional gunmen or a different person altogether ...
See also:President of the United States, President of the United States - Requirements to hold office, President of the United States - Election, President of the United States - Inauguration and oath of office, President of the United States - Terms of office, President of the United States - Succession, President of the United States - Powers, President of the United States - Salary and benefits, President of the United States - Salary, President of the United States - Residences, President of the United States - Traveling, President of the United States - Secret Service, President of the United States - Benefits after Presidency, President of the United States - Officeholders, President of the United States - Life after the Presidency, President of the United States - Presidential facts, President of the United States - Transition events, President of the United States - Other facts, President of the United States - Notes Read more here: » President of the United States: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Presidential facts |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Presidential facts
President of the United States - Transition events.
Four U.S. Presidents have been assassinated while in office:
Abraham Lincoln in 1865 by John Wilkes Booth
James Garfield in 1881 by Charles J. Guiteau (Guiteau shot him but Garfield arguably died due to subsequent incorrect medical care)
William McKinley in 1901 by Leon Czolgosz
John F. Kennedy in 1963, generally thought to be by Lee Harvey Oswald [1] although many theories suggest additional gunmen. [2]
...
See also:President of the United States, President of the United States - Requirements to hold office, President of the United States - Election, President of the United States - Old system, President of the United States - Current system, President of the United States - Campaign, President of the United States - Terms of office, President of the United States - Succession, President of the United States - Powers, President of the United States - Presidential salary and benefits, President of the United States - Salary, President of the United States - Residences, President of the United States - Travelling, President of the United States - Secret Service, President of the United States - Office-holders, President of the United States - Timeline, President of the United States - Life after the Presidency, President of the United States - Presidential facts, President of the United States - Transition events, President of the United States - Other facts, President of the United States - Related topics, President of the United States - Notes Read more here: » President of the United States: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Presidential facts |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - Alternative history fiction - History of alternate history fiction
Alternative history fiction - Antiquity.
The earliest example of alternative history appears to be Book IX, sections 17-19, of Livy's History of Rome from Its Foundation. He contemplates the possibility of Alexander the Great expanding his father's empire westward instead of eastward and attacking Rome in the 4th century BC.
Alternative history fiction - 19th century.
The earliest alternative history published as a complete work, rather than an aside or digression in a l ...
See also:Alternative history fiction, Alternative history fiction - History of alternate history fiction, Alternative history fiction - Antiquity, Alternative history fiction - 19th century, Alternative history fiction - Early 20th century, Alternative history fiction - Cross-time stories, Alternative history fiction - Introducing the paratime patrol, Alternative history fiction - Development of more sophisticated framings, Alternative history fiction - The Connecticut Yankee wins at last!, Alternative history fiction - Major U.S. writers explore alternate histories, Alternative history fiction - Contemporary alternate history in popular literature including the s-f genre, Alternative history fiction - Alternate history in the contemporary fantasy genre, Alternative history fiction - Elements of Alternate History, Alternative history fiction - The boundaries of alternative history, Alternative history fiction - Alternative history in other media, Alternative history fiction - Points of divergence, Alternative history fiction - Counterfactual and virtual history, Alternative history fiction - Sidewise Award for Alternate History, Alternative history fiction - Published alternative histories, Alternative history fiction - Online alternative histories Read more here: » Alternative history fiction: Encyclopedia II - Alternative history fiction - History of alternate history fiction |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Presidential facts
President of the United States - Transition events.
Four U.S. Presidents have been assassinated while in office:
Abraham Lincoln in 1865 by John Wilkes Booth
James Garfield in 1881 by Charles J. Guiteau (Guiteau shot him but Garfield arguably died due to subsequent incorrect medical care)
William McKinley in 1901 by Leon Czolgosz
John Kennedy in 1963, officially by Lee Harvey Oswald alone[2] although many theories suggest additional gunmen or a different person altogether ...
See also:President of the United States, President of the United States - Requirements to hold office, President of the United States - Election, President of the United States - Inauguration and oath of office, President of the United States - Terms of office, President of the United States - Succession, President of the United States - Powers, President of the United States - Presidential salary and benefits, President of the United States - Salary, President of the United States - Residences, President of the United States - Travelling, President of the United States - Secret Service, President of the United States - Benefits after Presidency, President of the United States - Officeholders, President of the United States - Life after the Presidency, President of the United States - Presidential facts, President of the United States - Transition events, President of the United States - Other facts, President of the United States - Notes Read more here: » President of the United States: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Presidential facts |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - Sino-American relations - History
Sino-American relations - From American Independence to the Treaty of Wanghsia.
First contact between the post-revolutionary Americans and the Chinese occurred during the voyage of the trader ship Empress of China, which arrived at Canton in 1784. Given the Chinese demand for raw goods as well as the American demand for anything remotely exotic, the voyage of the Empress was a financial windfall for its owners and thus began the lucrative Sino- ...
See also:Sino-American relations, Sino-American relations - Images and conceptions, Sino-American relations - History, Sino-American relations - From American Independence to the Treaty of Wanghsia, Sino-American relations - The Open Door Policy, Sino-American relations - World War II, Sino-American relations - People's Republic of China, Sino-American relations - Korean War, Sino-American relations - Relations very cold, Sino-American relations - Rapproachement, Sino-American relations - Liaison Office 1973-1978, Sino-American relations - U.S.-China relations since normalization, Sino-American relations - Bilateral relations after Tiananmen, Sino-American relations - Sino-American relations after 9/11, Sino-American relations - Important issues in Sino-American relations, Sino-American relations - Chinese military spending, Sino-American relations - Taiwan, Sino-American relations - U.S.-China economic relations, Sino-American relations - Human rights, Sino-American relations - Sino-American relations, Sino-American relations - Other Chinese relations, Sino-American relations - Other American relations Read more here: » Sino-American relations: Encyclopedia II - Sino-American relations - History |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - Zbigniew Brzezinski - Biography
Zbigniew Brzezinski - Early years.
History of Poland (1918-1939), and
Second Polish Republic;
Weimar Republic, and
Nazi Germany;
History of the Soviet Union (1927-1953), and
Great Purge.
Zbigniew Brzezinski was born in Warsaw, Poland, in 1928. This was a brief period of independence for Poland, after having been erased from the map by neighboring powers: Austria, Prussia, and Russia. He was the son of a Polish diplomat, Tadeusz Brzeziński, who had ...
See also:Zbigniew Brzezinski, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Biography, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Early years, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Rising influence, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Government, Zbigniew Brzezinski - After power, Zbigniew Brzezinski - As National Security Advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Major policies, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Afghanistan, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Iran, Zbigniew Brzezinski - China, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Arms control, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Arab-Israeli peace, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Poland the Pope and Solidarity, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Academia, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Geostrategy, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Public life, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Quotations, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Bibliography, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Works by Brzezinski, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Works by other authors Read more here: » Zbigniew Brzezinski: Encyclopedia II - Zbigniew Brzezinski - Biography |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Stalinist development
History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Planning.
At the fourteenth Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in December 1927, Stalin attacked the left by expelling Trotsky and his supporters from the party and then moving against the right by abandoning Lenin's New Economic Policy which had been championed by Nikolai Bukharin and Alexei Ivanovich Rykov. Warning delegates of an impending capitalist encirclement, he stressed that survival and development could only occur by pursuing the rapid developmen ...
See also:History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Stalinist development, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Planning, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Industrialization in practice, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Collectivization, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Changes in Soviet society, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Purges, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Patriotic War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - War and Stalinist development, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Wartime developments, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Cold War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Soviet hegemony over Eastern Europe, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The tenor of Soviet-U.S. relations, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The breakdown of postwar peace, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Two visions of the world, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The beginning of the Cold War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Containment and the Marshall Plan, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Korean War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Notes, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - External link Read more here: » History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953: Encyclopedia II - History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Stalinist development |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great PurgesMain article: Great Purge.
As this process unfolded, Stalin consolidated near-absolute power using the 1934 assassination of Sergei Kirov (which many suspect Stalin of having planned) as a pretext to launch the Great Purges against his suspected political and ideological opponents, most notably the old cadres and the rank and file of the Bolshevik Party. Trotsky had already been expelled from the party in 1927, exiled to Kazakhstan in 1928 and then expelled from the USSR entirely in 1929. Stalin used the purges to politically a ...
See also:History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Stalinist development, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Planning, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Industrialization in practice, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Collectivization, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Changes in Soviet society, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Purges, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Patriotic War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - War and Stalinist development, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Wartime developments, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Cold War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Soviet hegemony over Eastern Europe, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The tenor of Soviet-U.S. relations, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The breakdown of postwar peace, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Two visions of the world, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The beginning of the Cold War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Containment and the Marshall Plan, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Korean War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Notes, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - External link Read more here: » History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953: Encyclopedia II - History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Purges |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Patriotic WarMain article: Eastern Front (World War II)
History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - War and Stalinist development.
Heavy-industrialization contributed to the Soviet Union's wartime victory over Nazi Germany in the Second World War (known throughout the former USSR as the Great Patriotic War). The Red Army overturned the Nazi eastern expansion single-handedly (although relying heavily on lend-lease aid from the United States and United Kingdom), with the tide of war on the Eastern Front turning at the ...
See also:History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Stalinist development, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Planning, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Industrialization in practice, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Collectivization, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Changes in Soviet society, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Purges, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Patriotic War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - War and Stalinist development, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Wartime developments, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Cold War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Soviet hegemony over Eastern Europe, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The tenor of Soviet-U.S. relations, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The breakdown of postwar peace, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Two visions of the world, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The beginning of the Cold War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Containment and the Marshall Plan, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Korean War, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - Notes, History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - External link Read more here: » History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953: Encyclopedia II - History of the Soviet Union 1927-1953 - The Great Patriotic War |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - Zbigniew Brzezinski - AcademiaBrzezinski was on the faculty of Harvard University from 1953 to 1960, and of Columbia University from 1960 to 1989, where he headed up the Institute on Communist Affairs. He is currently a professor of foreign policy at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University in Washington D.C..
As a scholar he has developed his thoughts over the years, fashioning fundamental theories on international relations and geostrategy. During the 1950’s he worked on the theory of totalitarianism. His thought i ...
See also:Zbigniew Brzezinski, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Biography, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Early years, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Rising influence, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Government, Zbigniew Brzezinski - After power, Zbigniew Brzezinski - As National Security Advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Major policies, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Afghanistan, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Iran, Zbigniew Brzezinski - China, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Arms control, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Arab-Israeli peace, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Poland the Pope and Solidarity, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Academia, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Geostrategy, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Public life, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Quotations, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Bibliography, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Works by Brzezinski, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Works by other authors Read more here: » Zbigniew Brzezinski: Encyclopedia II - Zbigniew Brzezinski - Academia |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - Zbigniew Brzezinski - Bibliography
Zbigniew Brzezinski - Works by Brzezinski.
Major works:
The Permanent Purge: Politics in Soviet Totalitarianism, Cambridge: Harvard University Press (1956)
Soviet Bloc: Unity and Conflict, New York: Praeger (1961), ISBN 0674825454
Between Two Ages : America's Role in the Technetronic Era, New York: Viking Press (1970), ISBN 0313234981
Power and Principle: Memoirs of the National Security Adviser, 1977-1981, New York: Farrar, Strauss, ...
See also:Zbigniew Brzezinski, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Biography, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Early years, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Rising influence, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Government, Zbigniew Brzezinski - After power, Zbigniew Brzezinski - As National Security Advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Major policies, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Afghanistan, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Iran, Zbigniew Brzezinski - China, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Arms control, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Arab-Israeli peace, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Poland the Pope and Solidarity, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Academia, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Geostrategy, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Public life, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Quotations, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Bibliography, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Works by Brzezinski, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Works by other authors Read more here: » Zbigniew Brzezinski: Encyclopedia II - Zbigniew Brzezinski - Bibliography |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - PowersThe President, according to the Constitution, must “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” To carry out this responsibility, the president presides over the executive branch of the federal government; a vast organization of about 4 million people, including 1 million active-duty military personnel. A President will make as many as 6,000 appointments to government positions, including appointments to the federal judiciary. The Senate must confirm all judicial appointments as well as the appointments of all principal officers. See also:President of the United States, President of the United States - Requirements to hold office, President of the United States - Election, President of the United States - Inauguration and oath of office, President of the United States - Terms of office, President of the United States - Succession, President of the United States - Powers, President of the United States - Salary and benefits, President of the United States - Salary, President of the United States - Residences, President of the United States - Traveling, President of the United States - Secret Service, President of the United States - Benefits after Presidency, President of the United States - Officeholders, President of the United States - Life after the Presidency, President of the United States - Presidential facts, President of the United States - Transition events, President of the United States - Other facts, President of the United States - Notes Read more here: » President of the United States: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Powers |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Salary and benefits
President of the United States - Salary.
The First Congress voted to pay George Washington a salary of $25,000 a year—a significant sum in 1789. Washington, already a wealthy man, refused to accept his salary.
Traditionally, the President is the highest-paid government employee. Consequently, the President's salary serves as a traditional cap for all other federal officials, such as the Chief Justice. A raise for 2001 was approved by Congress and President Bill Clinton in 1999 because other officials who ...
See also:President of the United States, President of the United States - Requirements to hold office, President of the United States - Election, President of the United States - Inauguration and oath of office, President of the United States - Terms of office, President of the United States - Succession, President of the United States - Powers, President of the United States - Salary and benefits, President of the United States - Salary, President of the United States - Residences, President of the United States - Traveling, President of the United States - Secret Service, President of the United States - Benefits after Presidency, President of the United States - Officeholders, President of the United States - Life after the Presidency, President of the United States - Presidential facts, President of the United States - Transition events, President of the United States - Other facts, President of the United States - Notes Read more here: » President of the United States: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Salary and benefits |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Life after the PresidencyAfter a president of the U.S. leaves office, the title “President” continues to be applied to that person the rest of his life. Former presidents continue to be important national figures, and in some cases go on to successful post-presidential careers:
John Quincy Adams enjoyed a prosperous career in the House of Representatives after his term in the White House.
Andrew Johnson was elected to the same Senate that tried his impeachment, serving for five months in 1875 before dying from a stroke in Tennessee.
See also:President of the United States, President of the United States - Requirements to hold office, President of the United States - Election, President of the United States - Inauguration and oath of office, President of the United States - Terms of office, President of the United States - Succession, President of the United States - Powers, President of the United States - Salary and benefits, President of the United States - Salary, President of the United States - Residences, President of the United States - Traveling, President of the United States - Secret Service, President of the United States - Benefits after Presidency, President of the United States - Officeholders, President of the United States - Life after the Presidency, President of the United States - Presidential facts, President of the United States - Transition events, President of the United States - Other facts, President of the United States - Notes Read more here: » President of the United States: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Life after the Presidency |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - Zbigniew Brzezinski - Major policiesDuring the 1960's Brzezinski articulated the strategy of peaceful engagement for undermining the Soviet bloc and persuaded President Johnson, while serving on the State Department Policy Planning Council, to adopt in October 1966 peaceful engagement as U.S. strategy, placing détente ahead of German reunification and thus reversing prior U.S. priorities.
During the 1970s and 1980s, at the height of his political involvement, Brzezinski participated in the formation of the Trilateral Commission in order to more closely cement U.S.-Japa ...
See also:Zbigniew Brzezinski, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Biography, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Early years, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Rising influence, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Government, Zbigniew Brzezinski - After power, Zbigniew Brzezinski - As National Security Advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Major policies, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Afghanistan, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Iran, Zbigniew Brzezinski - China, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Arms control, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Arab-Israeli peace, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Poland the Pope and Solidarity, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Academia, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Geostrategy, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Public life, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Quotations, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Bibliography, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Works by Brzezinski, Zbigniew Brzezinski - Works by other authors Read more here: » Zbigniew Brzezinski: Encyclopedia II - Zbigniew Brzezinski - Major policies |
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 |  |  | free world: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Requirements to hold officeSection One of Article II of the U.S. Constitution establishes the requirements one must meet in order to become President. The president must be a natural-born citizen of the United States (or a citizen of the United States at the time the U.S. Constitution was adopted), be at least 35 years old, and have been a resident of the United States for 14 years.
The natural-born citizenship requirement has been the subject of controversy recently. Some commentators argue that the clause should be repealed because it excludes qualified peopl ...
See also:President of the United States, President of the United States - Requirements to hold office, President of the United States - Election, President of the United States - Old system, President of the United States - Current system, President of the United States - Campaign, President of the United States - Terms of office, President of the United States - Succession, President of the United States - Powers, President of the United States - Presidential salary and benefits, President of the United States - Salary, President of the United States - Residences, President of the United States - Travelling, President of the United States - Secret Service, President of the United States - Office-holders, President of the United States - Timeline, President of the United States - Life after the Presidency, President of the United States - Presidential facts, President of the United States - Transition events, President of the United States - Other facts, President of the United States - Related topics, President of the United States - Notes Read more here: » President of the United States: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Requirements to hold office |
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