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Be effective, or get re-elected by saying that you tried, but you just couldn't do it, because you need 15 more Republican "wins", in the next election.

If one or more parent(s) want(s) to insist that his/her/their minor children live the life that the parent(s) consider to be "in the best interests" of "the family", until such time as those minor children reach (or "might reach") the age of majority, what American Government --Federal, State, or local/municipal-- is empowered to gainsay that parental decision?

Under what circumstances?

It is my understanding, as a graduate of a northern-Virginia high-school (and as an attendee in certain classes and seminars, post-high-school), the societal role of an American Legislature seems to amount to "defining 'right and wrong' and 'the way things should be', in a continually-regenerating, secular Republic whose population (ALL of whose members are equal in stature, rights, privilege, and [possibly] duty, in the eyes of the Law) might or might not (at that Citizen's option) individually claim, embrace, and/or espouse an undefined aggregate or amalgam of creeds, religions, philosophies, and ancestral heritages, NONE of which --if only because of the Constitutional prohibition against the Law being permitted to taint or "corrupt" "the blood" of an American family lineage, by requiring the "posterity", even of a traitor, to be required to atone for crimes committed by a forbear-- is, in fact, an AMERICAN ethos.

Surely, there is no "rule" that cannot be "gamed".

Anyone who can endow a chair at a University, in one Commonwealth, is capable of moving that chair to some other institution, whether "at-will" or "as circumstances require".

If I were going to deny funding to a State-supported University, in Pennsylvania, I would have done so, the year after a homeless man, in Philadelphia, spent 20 minutes running a series of Google searches on the nature of the "powdered alcohol" that was being debated, in Harrisburg, according to the Philadelphia "Inquirer" of the day.

The Philadelphia "Inquirer" reported that the Legislature understood "powdered alcohol" to be a "powder" that, when mixed with water, produces a CHEMICAL REACTION that transforms the WATER into a "grain alcohol" that is "[more potent than any distilled liquor available for sale in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania]".

Knowing --based on 35-year old memories of my 10th-grade chemistry class-- that "powdered alcohol" had to be "other than that which was being reported", I performed my Internet-searches; and, then, contacted Members of the State Legislature and an Officer of a certain, Executive Branch Agency, warning all, equally, that the "hype" regarding "powdered alcohol" risked casting the Legislature of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania as a group of "persons lacking any support, whatsoever, in their efforts to write laws that ESTABLISH JUSTICE within that Commonwealth", regardless of the amount of money that the Legislature appropriates, in any, given year.

[NOTE: My memory of my 10th-Grade chemistry class convinced me that any "reaction" that would strip hydrogen atoms from water and reassemble those atoms a way that would form alcohol, would have been such a sudden, heat-generating "reaction", that a nearly-NUCLEAR-style explosion would happen, when the first drop of water would touch that "powder".

So, I looked up the inventor of "powdered alcohol"; found some mention of the product, at some regulatory Agency, in the Washington, DC area (probably, the FDA); and discovered that "powdered alcohol" was, in fact, "[alcohol that had been squirted through a cologne-type spray-nozzle, with every, resultant droplet being coated with corn-starch]".

Adding water to the "powder" would dissolve the corn-starch coating of the alcohol-droplets, yielding a DILUTED (rather than "exceedingly strong") alcoholic cocktail.

My phone calls to the [State] Government arrived too late; the ban on "powdered alcohol" had already passed the Legislature. The quotes --by Legislators who, having (apparently) been "briefed" on the subject, had made statements to "the media"-- had already been published.

Is there a "Chemistry" major offered, in any of the State-supported institutions of higher learning, which operate within the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania?

Is there anyone, on the faculty, who might possess knowledge sufficient to imagine the nature of the kind of [al]CHEMICAL transformation that would be necessary, to transform a molecule of water into a molecule of alcohol?

Is there a "channel of communication" which "leverages" the "support" offered by the Legislature, to various groups, institutions, and "stores of specialized knowledge" for the benefit of the People of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in support of such efforts as their Government makes, to "establish justice" (in accordance with the "Preamble" portion of the Constitution of the United States of America?

How was that "channel" instituted? When? Why? By whom?]

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Thank you for what you are trying to do. I watch so much of our world being lost as people seem to be sitting on their hands. You will be rewarded for your efforts by someone greater than I.

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