The noun 'coercion' is a word an act of causing someone to do something or preventing someone from doing something by force or threat. An act of 'coercion' can stop someone from going a certain place, but it is not the definition of the word. Someone can be stopped from going to a place by many means (blockage, insufficient funds, illness, etc.) that do not involve coercion.
Stop it or else is a type of threat one person may make against another. For example, a parent might use this threat against their child to discourage unwanted behavior.
no
Deserving Design - 2007 The Next Stop for the Mentally Disabled 3-8 was released on: USA: 2008
Are you still disabled? Not if you are at full retirement, but if you are on disability SS, you may lose benefits if you are no longer disabled.
Not physically, but he can stop your benefits if you can not prove in court you are actually so disabled you can not work. Just because you are too disabled to do one type of work does not mean you can't do another. Judges do not stop benefits. The agency that issues the benefits decides whether the individual is still disabled. Judges can issue orders to withhold child support from disability income.
He was going against Nazism at the time and he believed in trying to stop those who are "evil..."
Keeping a person from leaving a room when they want to leave or touching them when they don't want to be touched because of a disagreement is against the law.
no it doesn't
It would depend on the nature of the eviction. Disability does not mitigate legal responsibilities such as paying rent, maintaining the property in reasonable condition, or following the provisions of your lease agreement. If the disabled person requires reasonable time to vacate the unit, this issue needs to be presented to the judge handling the eviction. Most judges will make exceptions for the disabled to give them more time to vacate the unit.
Abraham Lincoln who founded the Emancipation Proclamation to stop slavery Abe Lincoln
Stop Violence Against Women was created in 2004.