What's hot


Word Association

Book (Word Association)
Price: $16.95




Lulu.com

Book (Lulu.com)
List Price: $29.98
Price: $26.99
You Save: $2.99 (10%)



Word Association

Book (Word Association)
List Price: $16.95
Price: $16.95





eBooks



Nolo

Book (Nolo)
List Price: $34.99
Price: $19.01
You Save: $15.98 (46%)




Book (University of Illinois Press)
List Price: $29.95


car insurance laws FAQ


Yeah, the law is you can't drive in NY state without insurance. As soon as you get your license, you will be added to your parents insurance policy. Only your agent can tell you how much it will cost to do that, but it will be high. If you try to get


Yeah, the law is you can't drive in NY state without insurance. As soon as you get your license, you will be added to your parents insurance policy. Only your agent can tell you how much it will cost to do that, but it will be high. If you try to get


this site may have the answer for you ....


I wouldn't think so, especially if they won't be driving your car, but check with your agent to be sure.


Car registration is handled separately by each province/territory. The rules vary a fair bit from place to place. Several provinces (BC, Manitoba, not sure which others) has a combined registration/government insurance policy.

Normally,

car insurance laws news

ObamaCare preview -- 5 things we can expect to hear argued before the Supreme ...

18.05.12

A week from today, the case of our lifetime will begin to unfold as the Supreme Court commences its three-day review of ObamaCare. While the policy and political implications of this case are compelling, even those consequences are fleeting when compared to the constitutional precedent that will be set and the American freedoms at stake. 

The core challenge to the health care law is the argument that the individual mandate—Congress’ requirement forcing Americans to buy health insurance—is not only draconian, but grossly unconstitutional. 

This challenge was initially derided as political grandstanding rather than a serious legal argument, but that criticism has been largely silenced by the numerous federal courts that have agreed with the challengers -- not to mention the Supreme Court’s virtually unprecedented decision to hear three days of oral argument. 

The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), along with our 26 state co-plaintiffs, will argue that the mandate is not only unconstitutional but that it also cannot be severed from the rest of the law, i.e., the entire law should be struck down if the mandate is ruled unconstitutional. 


Source: Fox News