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    Prohibition of Riba

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    BOF Y2S2 2 PFS 2253 ISLAMIC FINANCE Prohibition of Riba Prepared by: Nuradli Ridzuan Shah & Abdullaah Jalil Stages of Revelation • First stage: al-Rum‚ 39 • Second stage: al-Nisa’‚ 161 • Third stage: Ali cImran‚ 130 • Fourth stage: al-Baqarah‚ 275-281 Al-Riba: Its Definition • Riba: – Deferment in the time of exchange (riba al-nasiah) – Quantity of one of the counter values (riba al-fadhl) al-Riba Time Factor Ribawi items Quantity Factor Al-Riba: Its Definition • Nabil Salih’s:

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    Drug Prohibition

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    should be prohibited because drugs are unhealthily for the users ’ brain and body. Day-by-day brain cells start to die and users ’ start to think slowly and unhealthily. Acording to the website(http://en.wikipedia.com) titled Arguments for prohibition: The brain damage associated with drug use is a result of regular use and generally cannot be avoided. Accordingly users ’ lose weight‚ and get some psychologic problems. For example; forgetfulness‚ depression‚ tremble. User start to

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    Prohibition Fast Facts

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    Prohibition Fast Facts  ● So convinced were they that alcohol was the cause of virtually all crime that‚ on  i  the eve of Prohibition (1920­1933)‚ some towns actually sold their jails. ​ ● During Prohibition‚ temperance activists hired a scholar to rewrite the Bible by  ii  removing all references to alcohol beverage. ​ ● The Ku Klux Klan (KKK) strongly supported Prohibition and its strict  iii  enforcement. ​ ● Because the temperance movement taught that alcohol was a poison‚  supporters insis

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    Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 The Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 is an amendment to the Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It prohibits employers from discriminating against workers based on pregnancy‚ childbirth or related medical conditions. It affects only companies that employ 15 or more people. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) enforces the Pregnancy Discrimination Act. Under the act‚ an employer cannot lawfully refuse to hire a woman if she is pregnant

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    Primary Health Care (PHC) as the means for providing a comprehensive‚ universal‚ equitable and affordable healthcare service for all countries. It was unanimously adopted by all WHO member countries at Alma-Ata in the former Soviet Republic in September 1978. This declaration however failed to reach its goal of "Health for All by the year 2000". It has especially failed the women of Sub-Saharan Africa. Every year millions of women and female children are subjected to the inhumane practice of Female Genital

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    John C. Anyanwu Jr. 10/23/2011 National Alcohol Prohibition Wayne Hall’s article on the policy lessons of National Alcohol Prohibition in the United States‚ 1920–1933 starts off by implying that national prohibition on alcohol was a failure. “National alcohol prohibition in the United States between 1920 and 1933 is believed widely to have been a misguided and failed social experiment that made alcohol problems worse by encouraging drinks to switch to spirits and created a large black market

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    The Prohibition: Success or Failure? Despite the polarizing effects of alcohol‚ many people are very reliant on alcoholic beverages in today’s society. With this dependency‚ it is unclear how today’s society would react if the law prohibited alcohol sales today; however‚ this would not be the first time this has occurred in history. As early as 1826‚ when Reverend Lyman Beecher preached against the evils of alcohol in Sermon 1: Nature of Occasions of Intemperance‚ harmonious prohibitionists began

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    Marijuana Prohibition Marijuana prohibition has been in America since the 1930’s‚ but prohibition took power and money from the government and gave it to gangs and criminals. There has been a nationwide war against marijuana for years now; yet the drug is still very easy to find and acquire. Prohibition was implemented to reduce the use‚ selling‚ and cultivating of the marijuana plant (Venkataraman). Prohibition is largely depended on arrest‚ incarceration and‚ the seizure of private property; but

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    of cultures and has shown the world how ambiguous a substance can be. In 1920 the 18th Amendment banning the sale‚ manufacture‚ and transport of alcohol was passed. This was called Prohibition. Prohibition was supposed to decrease crime‚ death rate due to alcohol abuse‚ and the overall consumption of alcohol. Prohibition was a failure because it did the opposite of everything is was supposed to prevent. Prohibition’s first problem was that it didn’t ban the overall consumption of alcohol. This caused

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    The National Prohibition of Alcohol (1920-1933)‚ also known as “The Noble Experiment‚” is the only constitutional amendment to be repealed through another amendment‚ thus making it a debated topic since the mid 1900’s. Although the primary purpose of Prohibition was to reduce crime and improve the health of the United States‚ it ended with a result that could be considered the complete opposite. Some historians argue that it was a law that was impossible to enforce‚ but based on factual evidence

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