0:22 McCullough v. Maryland 1:34 US v. Lopez 2:27 Baker v. Carr 3:16 Shaw v. Reno 3:58 Marbury v. Madison 4:55 Engel v. Vitale 5:30 Wisconsin v. Yoder 6:12 Schenck v. US 6:58 Tinker vs Des Moines 7:46 NYT Co. v. US 8:25 Gideon v. Wainwright 9:06 Roe v. Wade 9:48 McDonald v. Chicago 10:36 Brown v. Board 11:20 Citizens United v. FEC
I took notes on this video, and I'll post them here in case anybody is interested. :D ______________________________________________________ Federalism (necessary & proper/interstate commerce): McCulloch v. Maryland: necessary & proper clause and commerce clause means the fed gov't can create a bank and the states can't tax it. US v. Lopez: regulating guns in school does not fall into necessary & proper clause and commerce clause Gerrymandering (14th amendment): Baker v. Carr: (this was decided as a not a political question so it could be ruled on) can't have districts of unequal population size because of the equal protection clause of 14th Shaw v. Reno: Can't draw a district based on race alone because of the equal protection clause of 14th Marbury v. Madison: establishes judicial review based on supremacy clause (constitution is above all other laws) Brown v. Board of Education: no separate but equal based on equal protection clause, overturns Plessy v. Furgeson Freedom of Religion (1st amendment): Engle v. Vitale: can't have any prayer in school because of the establishment clause Wisconsin v. Yoder: Amish don't have to go to high school based on the free exercise clause Free speech (1st amendment) Schneck v. US: Time, place, and manner restrictions on free speech. US espionage act could restrict free speech in wartime. First restriction on free speech. Tinker v. De Moines: can have free, symbolic speech in public schools by students Citizen United v. FEC: Intrest groups, corporations, and Unions can spend as much money as they want separate from the candidate because they are people with the right to speech. The free press (1st amendment) NY times co. v. US: can't do prior restraint (censorship) on the press 6th amendment: Gideon v. Wainwright: States must provide lawyers, incorporating 6th amendment to states Right to privacy: Roe v. Wade: States can't ban abortion based on right of privacy which is implied 2nd amendment: McDonald v. Chicago: federal self-defense right (from past case) applies to states
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) Necessary and Proper/Supremacy Clause Expanded federal power Congress can establish a national bank based on the necessary and proper clause States cannot tax the federal government based on the supremacy clause Several states, including Maryland, passed laws to tax the Bank of the United States Congress MAY establish a national bank States may NOT tax the national government As a result of the necessary and proper (elastic) clause, Congress has implied powers and is not limited by its expressed powers Supremacy clause asserts that the national government is superior to state when conflict Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905) The preamble to the constitution isn’t the source of substantive power for justice “Establish Justice” - broad declaration for purposes It’s the body of the constitution that establishes justice US v. Lopez (1995) Necessary and Proper Clause/Interstate Commerce Limits Congress’ commerce clause power (first time in a while) The 10th Amendment reserves some powers to states The commerce clause does not give Congress unlimited power A student in Texas brought an unloaded gun to school and was charged with violating the federal Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990 The federal government doesn’t have the right to pass this law since it doesn’t substantially affect interstate commerce The 10th Amendment protects state power in a federal system The commerce clause does not grant Congress endless power Baker v. Carr (1962) Gerrymandering and the 14th Amendment and Equal Protection Clause Banned malapportionment Established “one person, one vote” principle of equal representation Tennessee voting districts were of very unequal size, therefore one person’s vote wasn’t necessarily equal to another person’s vote Apportionment claims can be judged in federal court Leads to “one person, one vote” principle (equal representation in HoR) Under the equal protection clause the appellants had a right to challenge unequal apportionment Shaw v. Reno (1993) Gerrymandering and the 14th Amendment and Equal Protection Clause Banned racial gerrymandering even though it was to increase minority representation Promoted a color blind interpretation of the Constitution North Carolina created a very bizarrely shaped majority-minority district for the purpose of increasing black representation in Congress Congressional districts cannot be drawn based on only race Opposed colorblind ideal of the Constitution and the violates equal protection clause Marbury v. Madison (1803) Judicial Review and Supremacy Clause Establishes judicial review, the power of the Court to rule on the constitutionality of congressional laws, executive actions, and state laws William Marbury petitioned the Supreme Court to compel Secretary of State James Madison to deliver his commission The Judiciary Act of 1789 conflicted with the Constitution and was therefore null and void Establishes judicial review is able to declare unconstitutionality Based on supremacy clause, the Constitution supersedes the laws Engel v. Vitale (1961) Freedom of Religion (1st amendment) States cannot promote prayer in public school, even if participation is voluntary Public schools in New York began the school day by inviting student to recite a prayer State-sponsored prayer violates the establishment clause Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972) Freedom of Religion (1st amendment) Compelling Amish students to attend public school beyond 8th grade violates the free exercise clause Amish families in Wisconsin refused to send their children to high school, violating a Wisconsin law Individual’s interest in free exercise of religion outweighs the state’s interest in compelling school attendance beyond 8th grade Tinker v. Des Moines (1969) Free speech (1st amendment) Students have free speech even while at school Symbolic speech is protected speech Students were suspended for wearing black armbands as a symbol to protest the Vietnam War The armbands represent pure (protected) speech and students have free speech rights at school Students have a right to political, symbolic speech based on the First Amendment’s free speech clause Schenck v. United States (1919) Free speech (1st amendment) Speech can be limited if it creates a clear and present danger Allowed for time, place, and manner restrictions on speech A war protester was arrested for violating the Espionage Act by attempting to obstruct military recruitment The Espionage Act did NOT violate the First Amendment and was an appropriate exercise of Congress’ wartime authority There may be time, place, and manner restriction on the First Amendment’s free speech guarantee Citizens United v. FEC (2010) Free speech (1st amendment) Objects to Bipartisan Campaign Reform act Banned corporations and unions from making political ads within 60 days of a general election or 30 days of primary election Corporations, unions, and interest groups can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money for independent political expenditures and are basically people and thus have free speech rights Based on 1st Amendment’s free speech clause, corporations, unions, and interest groups have the right to engage in political speech New York Times Co. v. United States (1971) The freedom of press (1st amendment) Because of the freedom of press, there is a heavy presumption against prior restraint Government couldn’t block publication of Pentagon Papers The Nixon administration attempted to stop the publication of the Pentagon Papers The government does NOT have the right to block this publication Because of the First Amendment’s freedom of the press, there is a heavy presumption against prior restraint McDonald v. Chicago (2010) 2nd Amendment and Selective Incorporation Incorporated an individual right to bear arms to states The city of Chicago denied all licenses for handguns, effectively banning them The 2nd Amendment’s right to bear arms for the purpose of self-defense applies to the states, striking down the Chicago policy Incorporated the 2nd Amendment’s individual right to bear arms through the 14th Amendment Gideon v. Wainwright (1963) 6th Amendment and Selective Incorporation Incorporated the right to an attorney to states A Florida man was charged with a felony and requested that the state appoint an attorney for him. The state of Florida denied the request. States must provide attorneys for defendants who can’t afford one Incorporated the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of the right to counsel, applying it to defendants in state court Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) Roe v. Wade (1973) Right to Privacy Established and incorporated a right to an abortion Based on the right of privacy A Texas state prohibited abortions except to save the pregnant woman’s life A woman has a right to an abortion based on the right to privacy This is within the right to privacy and is incorporated by the 14th Amendment Brown v. Board of Education (1954) Equal Protection Clause and Overturns Plessy v. Ferg. Racially segregated public schools violate the 14th Amendment Black students in several states were denied admittance to certain public schools based on race Racial segregation of public schools allowed “seperate but equal” principle of Plessy v. Ferguson is unconstitutional Racially segregated public schools violate the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment
I haven’t been in my AP Gov class in months because of a block schedule made for Covid. Binging these videos as a review is a life saver after I forgot everything
Going into AP Gov for my senior year of high school, this video accompanied my summer assignment and gave me all the information i needed to complete the assignment.
Awesome! So glad to help. Just FYI I have newer updated videos for the whole course, so be sure you're watching the latest versions during the school year!
Hey I just wanted to say I am so thankful for these videos and I know I can say this for lots of other AP Gov students here. We are in really hard times right now and this is really just giving me the direct information I need to pass the AP exam. Your videos are way more helpful than the college board's themselves, seriously you are my hero right now. Thank you so much!!
I have a friend who is studying with me. We are not collaborating, but we did create notes together as a form of studying. If you had not told us of the shared google docs we would have not been able to go to college. Thank you for securing our futures and investing in our education. We appreciate you Love- Ahkbar and Shabazz P.S.- I'll do anything for you ... and I mean ANYTHING P.P.S.- Have a wonderful future and may your progeny reflect your scintillating beauty, elegance, poise, and genius.
@@isabelkaufman5589 honestly, review videos like this really help. also, you can make either a word doc or flashcards with a list of all the required court cases and documents to help memorize them. practice writing essays a LOT. everyone studies differently, but this is what worked for me. keep in mind that I only had to write two essays and I could use my notes because of covid, so that will affect how you study
At first I had a really bad feeling that I wasn't gonna pass this test, but after watching your videos it brought my confidence on succeeding wayyy higher. THANK YOU SO MUCH!
I have watched and taken notes on almost all of your AP Gov review videos and I feel prepared for the test even without an AP review book. These are the most informative and concise review videos I have ever watched. Thank you so much :,)
Wow Carey I've been binging your Units 1-5, SCOTUS and Foundational Docs for the past week. Your stuff is great, and has helped me make a great study guide. AP exam time tomorrow baby
Thank you!!!!!! My teacher never got to talk about the last case thoroughly, and also (not really about what's being talked about) I keep looking at the FF7 case on your shelf lol
I appreciate this video, thanks for the help. I'm taking a test on the court cases tomorrow but I'll definitely be saving this video for AP exam prep. Thank you
If we use or mention a constitutional clause in one of our essays on the AP exam, do we need to state exactly where in the Constitution it is found? For example, could we just say the Supremacy clause, or do we need to say the Supremacy clause of Article 6 of the Constitution?
Hey, thank you so much for your wonderful reviews however if the essays are on Concept Application and Argumentative, then why do we need to review the required court cases? Just trying to save time and energy if not.
They could be used as a second piece of evidence in the argument essay. They probably won't be directly tested on but your knowledge of these cases might help with the concept application. 14 of the 15 cases are from units whose content will be on the exam so I don't think you can understand those units without them.
When Marbury sued Madison, was he just trying to get back at him for not giving him his job back? Im kind of confused between the connection of the facts of the case and the holding.
Yeah the facts to holding is pretty loose on this one. Marbury sued so that the Supreme Court would FORCE Madison (Secretary of State) to give him his job. But the Supreme Court Chief Justice knew that if he ruled for Marbury that Madison would have just refused to give him the job anyway and now the Court would look super weak. So instead the SC ruled that the law that gave Marbury the right to sue at the Supreme Court was unconstitutional. This was the first use of judicial review. So basically instead of ruling on whether Madison had to give Marbury a job the SC instead ruled the Judiciary Act unconstitutional, establishing judicial review.
I decided to binge-watch these videos on the day of the exam and am now realizing my AP gov teacher did not teach us any of this or anything about any of our required documents :| he didn't even teach us how to write the argumentative essay or FRQ. rip.
How did you do on your exam? My entire school year was online and a lot of students and teachers just got lazy. My exam is in 5 days and I'm just trying to cram as much as I can now. My AP Gov teacher was useless. All he did was play news videos in class. Barely practiced the exam. Only practiced a few MCQs and no FRQs or the essay. He didn't didn't go over the book in class. It's absolutely ridiculous. He's just setting the class up for failure.
Ummm I can lol. Precedents are are when the Court makes a ruling and that ruling then guides future rulings based on the principles of the first one. The Court typically follows precedent (stare decisis) but has the ability to overrule itself and create new precedent.
this man out here saving my entire school career
same
This mans a legend
Fr
Saving me an hour before the exam
@@roy6907 how did it go?
This man is legit the only reason I'll pass the exam
Go get dat bread kid
@@CareyLaManna i luv u...
The fact that you put the cases in order of their introduction and relevance in each unit is madly underrated.
The only teacher who didn’t confuse me about citizens united vs FEC
Awesome!
Collegeboard said that case won’t be on the exam so don’t worry
Right?!
Jon Williams 😀
Jon Williams are u for real? Anything else they say won’t be on it? I know the last 2 units aren’t.
I honestly don't know why this guy doesn't have millions of subscribers
Thanks! I'm trying lol
My AP Gov test is tomorrow and I basically checked out this year, you are saving my life right now😂😂😭😭
How did you do? My test is in 2 days 😭
@@toast3852 T-17 hours
Praise be...this man alone is gonna keep me alive tomorrow in the exam
0:22 McCullough v. Maryland
1:34 US v. Lopez
2:27 Baker v. Carr
3:16 Shaw v. Reno
3:58 Marbury v. Madison
4:55 Engel v. Vitale
5:30 Wisconsin v. Yoder
6:12 Schenck v. US
6:58 Tinker vs Des Moines
7:46 NYT Co. v. US
8:25 Gideon v. Wainwright
9:06 Roe v. Wade
9:48 McDonald v. Chicago
10:36 Brown v. Board
11:20 Citizens United v. FEC
I took notes on this video, and I'll post them here in case anybody is interested. :D
______________________________________________________
Federalism (necessary & proper/interstate commerce):
McCulloch v. Maryland: necessary & proper clause and commerce clause means the fed gov't can create a bank and the states can't tax it.
US v. Lopez: regulating guns in school does not fall into necessary & proper clause and commerce clause
Gerrymandering (14th amendment):
Baker v. Carr: (this was decided as a not a political question so it could be ruled on) can't have districts of unequal population size because of the equal protection clause of 14th
Shaw v. Reno: Can't draw a district based on race alone because of the equal protection clause of 14th
Marbury v. Madison: establishes judicial review based on supremacy clause (constitution is above all other laws)
Brown v. Board of Education: no separate but equal based on equal protection clause, overturns Plessy v. Furgeson
Freedom of Religion (1st amendment):
Engle v. Vitale: can't have any prayer in school because of the establishment clause
Wisconsin v. Yoder: Amish don't have to go to high school based on the free exercise clause
Free speech (1st amendment)
Schneck v. US: Time, place, and manner restrictions on free speech. US espionage act could restrict free speech in wartime. First restriction on free speech.
Tinker v. De Moines: can have free, symbolic speech in public schools by students
Citizen United v. FEC: Intrest groups, corporations, and Unions can spend as much money as they want separate from the candidate because they are people with the right to speech.
The free press (1st amendment)
NY times co. v. US: can't do prior restraint (censorship) on the press
6th amendment:
Gideon v. Wainwright: States must provide lawyers, incorporating 6th amendment to states
Right to privacy:
Roe v. Wade: States can't ban abortion based on right of privacy which is implied
2nd amendment:
McDonald v. Chicago: federal self-defense right (from past case) applies to states
Cora Lewis goat. I was just abt to take notes now i just have to copy/paste whats your venmo i gotchu
@@Felix-ct3vg :) hahaha these notes aren't meant to have monetary value. Glad they helped and good luck tomorrow !
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) Necessary and Proper/Supremacy Clause
Expanded federal power
Congress can establish a national bank based on the necessary and proper clause
States cannot tax the federal government based on the supremacy clause
Several states, including Maryland, passed laws to tax the Bank of the United States
Congress MAY establish a national bank
States may NOT tax the national government
As a result of the necessary and proper (elastic) clause, Congress has implied powers and is not limited by its expressed powers
Supremacy clause asserts that the national government is superior to state when conflict
Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905)
The preamble to the constitution isn’t the source of substantive power for justice
“Establish Justice” - broad declaration for purposes
It’s the body of the constitution that establishes justice
US v. Lopez (1995) Necessary and Proper Clause/Interstate Commerce
Limits Congress’ commerce clause power (first time in a while)
The 10th Amendment reserves some powers to states
The commerce clause does not give Congress unlimited power
A student in Texas brought an unloaded gun to school and was charged with violating the federal Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990
The federal government doesn’t have the right to pass this law since it doesn’t substantially affect interstate commerce
The 10th Amendment protects state power in a federal system
The commerce clause does not grant Congress endless power
Baker v. Carr (1962) Gerrymandering and the 14th Amendment and Equal Protection Clause
Banned malapportionment
Established “one person, one vote” principle of equal representation
Tennessee voting districts were of very unequal size, therefore one person’s vote wasn’t necessarily equal to another person’s vote
Apportionment claims can be judged in federal court
Leads to “one person, one vote” principle (equal representation in HoR)
Under the equal protection clause the appellants had a right to challenge unequal apportionment
Shaw v. Reno (1993) Gerrymandering and the 14th Amendment and Equal Protection Clause
Banned racial gerrymandering even though it was to increase minority representation
Promoted a color blind interpretation of the Constitution
North Carolina created a very bizarrely shaped majority-minority district for the purpose of increasing black representation in Congress
Congressional districts cannot be drawn based on only race
Opposed colorblind ideal of the Constitution and the violates equal protection clause
Marbury v. Madison (1803) Judicial Review and Supremacy Clause
Establishes judicial review, the power of the Court to rule on the constitutionality of congressional laws, executive actions, and state laws
William Marbury petitioned the Supreme Court to compel Secretary of State James Madison to deliver his commission
The Judiciary Act of 1789 conflicted with the Constitution and was therefore null and void
Establishes judicial review is able to declare unconstitutionality
Based on supremacy clause, the Constitution supersedes the laws
Engel v. Vitale (1961) Freedom of Religion (1st amendment)
States cannot promote prayer in public school, even if participation is voluntary
Public schools in New York began the school day by inviting student to recite a prayer
State-sponsored prayer violates the establishment clause
Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972) Freedom of Religion (1st amendment)
Compelling Amish students to attend public school beyond 8th grade violates the free exercise clause
Amish families in Wisconsin refused to send their children to high school, violating a Wisconsin law
Individual’s interest in free exercise of religion outweighs the state’s interest in compelling school attendance beyond 8th grade
Tinker v. Des Moines (1969) Free speech (1st amendment)
Students have free speech even while at school
Symbolic speech is protected speech
Students were suspended for wearing black armbands as a symbol to protest the Vietnam War
The armbands represent pure (protected) speech and students have free speech rights at school
Students have a right to political, symbolic speech based on the First Amendment’s free speech clause
Schenck v. United States (1919) Free speech (1st amendment)
Speech can be limited if it creates a clear and present danger
Allowed for time, place, and manner restrictions on speech
A war protester was arrested for violating the Espionage Act by attempting to obstruct military recruitment
The Espionage Act did NOT violate the First Amendment and was an appropriate exercise of Congress’ wartime authority
There may be time, place, and manner restriction on the First Amendment’s free speech guarantee
Citizens United v. FEC (2010) Free speech (1st amendment)
Objects to Bipartisan Campaign Reform act
Banned corporations and unions from making political ads within 60 days of a general election or 30 days of primary election
Corporations, unions, and interest groups can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money for independent political expenditures and are basically people and thus have free speech rights
Based on 1st Amendment’s free speech clause, corporations, unions, and interest groups have the right to engage in political speech
New York Times Co. v. United States (1971) The freedom of press (1st amendment)
Because of the freedom of press, there is a heavy presumption against prior restraint
Government couldn’t block publication of Pentagon Papers
The Nixon administration attempted to stop the publication of the Pentagon Papers
The government does NOT have the right to block this publication
Because of the First Amendment’s freedom of the press, there is a heavy presumption against prior restraint
McDonald v. Chicago (2010) 2nd Amendment and Selective Incorporation
Incorporated an individual right to bear arms to states
The city of Chicago denied all licenses for handguns, effectively banning them
The 2nd Amendment’s right to bear arms for the purpose of self-defense applies to the states, striking down the Chicago policy
Incorporated the 2nd Amendment’s individual right to bear arms through the 14th Amendment
Gideon v. Wainwright (1963) 6th Amendment and Selective Incorporation
Incorporated the right to an attorney to states
A Florida man was charged with a felony and requested that the state appoint an attorney for him. The state of Florida denied the request.
States must provide attorneys for defendants who can’t afford one
Incorporated the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of the right to counsel, applying it to defendants in state court
Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)
Roe v. Wade (1973) Right to Privacy
Established and incorporated a right to an abortion
Based on the right of privacy
A Texas state prohibited abortions except to save the pregnant woman’s life
A woman has a right to an abortion based on the right to privacy
This is within the right to privacy and is incorporated by the 14th Amendment
Brown v. Board of Education (1954) Equal Protection Clause and Overturns Plessy v. Ferg.
Racially segregated public schools violate the 14th Amendment
Black students in several states were denied admittance to certain public schools based on race
Racial segregation of public schools allowed “seperate but equal” principle of Plessy v. Ferguson is unconstitutional
Racially segregated public schools violate the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment
@Cora Lewis thank you so much, good luck on your test :D
Thanks! Good luck today everybody! 4 more hours!
Good luck to everyone else binging these 2 hours before the exam
Aidan MacDonald try 25 minutes😏😏
we're gonna make it 😭
T Minus 12 hours before I take the exam and I'm like cramming super hard rn but God bless this man for making these videos
Ah....1am...night before the exam. Just me, these UA-cam videos, and the crushing regret that I didn’t study sooner
What did you end up getting
this is my first time learning anything in this class. and it’s the day before the exam...
Same😭
How’d you do?
My test is on Monday and it’s Saturday and I just started studying and understanding each case properly
Shaniya Freeman just started now oops
Good luck to all of us lol
10 pm the night before the exam....I procrastinated way too much
last minute studying for this ap exam. good luck to everyone on Monday 😘
I haven’t been in my AP Gov class in months because of a block schedule made for Covid. Binging these videos as a review is a life saver after I forgot everything
Decided to wait until the last day to study. Your videos are saving me rn!
Here studying the day before, thank you!!!
Going into AP Gov for my senior year of high school, this video accompanied my summer assignment and gave me all the information i needed to complete the assignment.
Awesome! So glad to help. Just FYI I have newer updated videos for the whole course, so be sure you're watching the latest versions during the school year!
It's that time of the year again...thanks for the review!
Hey I just wanted to say I am so thankful for these videos and I know I can say this for lots of other AP Gov students here. We are in really hard times right now and this is really just giving me the direct information I need to pass the AP exam. Your videos are way more helpful than the college board's themselves, seriously you are my hero right now. Thank you so much!!
Awesome, so glad to help!!
I have a friend who is studying with me. We are not collaborating, but we did create notes together as a form of studying. If you had not told us of the shared google docs we would have not been able to go to college. Thank you for securing our futures and investing in our education. We appreciate you
Love-
Ahkbar and Shabazz
P.S.- I'll do anything for you ...
and I mean ANYTHING
P.P.S.- Have a wonderful future and may your progeny reflect your scintillating beauty, elegance, poise, and genius.
this is legit carry for my exam. thank you very much.
I'm still cramming less than one hour before the exam...
Did you do well?
@@jeffjeffy9606 I got a 5!!! lol thanks for asking
@@leobrower9138 yooo les go
@@leobrower9138 any tips?
@@isabelkaufman5589 honestly, review videos like this really help. also, you can make either a word doc or flashcards with a list of all the required court cases and documents to help memorize them. practice writing essays a LOT. everyone studies differently, but this is what worked for me. keep in mind that I only had to write two essays and I could use my notes because of covid, so that will affect how you study
Not all hero’s wear capes. Thank you. You have helped so many of us students with your videos.
At first I had a really bad feeling that I wasn't gonna pass this test, but after watching your videos it brought my confidence on succeeding wayyy higher. THANK YOU SO MUCH!
I have watched and taken notes on almost all of your AP Gov review videos and I feel prepared for the test even without an AP review book. These are the most informative and concise review videos I have ever watched. Thank you so much :,)
Awesome!!!
God bless you, I’m taking the late exam and you are a life saver!
Your videos are amazing man you deserve more respect across the board and from college board
Thanks!
Who is here the day before the exam
here the morning of 😵💫
William Marbury disliked this video since he didn't get his job back...
Wow Carey I've been binging your Units 1-5, SCOTUS and Foundational Docs for the past week. Your stuff is great, and has helped me make a great study guide. AP exam time tomorrow baby
I’m going to cry thank you!!
You're welcome! Here's a tissue :)
thankyou for this, im reviewing the morning before the test 😅
Coming in clutch! Many thanks boss!! Final hours start...now...
Got my big test tomorrow, thanks Mr LaManna for all your help!
Bless you, sir. You are my AP Gov savior.
Let's hope these are on the exam
8:22 Florida Man strikes again
Thank you!!!!!! My teacher never got to talk about the last case thoroughly, and also (not really about what's being talked about) I keep looking at the FF7 case on your shelf lol
GL on testing tmrw everyone :)
Samuel Rose good luck!
No u
Who else cramming right now
Me
I appreciate this video, thanks for the help. I'm taking a test on the court cases tomorrow but I'll definitely be saving this video for AP exam prep. Thank you
man of the year
If we use or mention a constitutional clause in one of our essays on the AP exam, do we need to state exactly where in the Constitution it is found? For example, could we just say the Supremacy clause, or do we need to say the Supremacy clause of Article 6 of the Constitution?
You'll probably be fine just saying the name of the clause.
You'd almost certainly be fine just saying the name of the clause.
my final is in 15 minutes so bless your soul ^^
not me cramming for tomorrow....
Watching this for a test tomorrow! Thanks.
Hey, thank you so much for your wonderful reviews however if the essays are on Concept Application and Argumentative, then why do we need to review the required court cases? Just trying to save time and energy if not.
They could be used as a second piece of evidence in the argument essay. They probably won't be directly tested on but your knowledge of these cases might help with the concept application. 14 of the 15 cases are from units whose content will be on the exam so I don't think you can understand those units without them.
the goat...thank you sir 🤝
Can you add timestamps in the description for the cases? Thanks for the help!
YOU'RE A LIFE SAVER OMG I PASSED BC OF YOU!!!
Will the questions ask about the story of the cases? Like about the reasons behind them?
saved me for my final exam!!! wish me luck
Here before the flood of people in a couple weeks
In all seriousness, this video was super helpful
A true OG
Starting in 20 minutes good luck boys and girls.
Literally life saver right now 🙌
the exam is in 5 minutes LMFAO better late than never ❤️
thank you so much for your videos! They're very comprehensive and helpful!
Awesome!
T minus 8 hours until the exam. Good luck everyone!
Did you do well?
HOLYYYYYYYY YOURE AMAZING
Could these cases be asked only on a concept application or the argumentative essay as well? Thanks!
You could choose to use a case as your second evidence on the AE if you wanted to
Thank you so much man, got my exam on thurday
Same🥲
@@userchange2076 good luck!
@@atmansingh3160 Thank you! You too.
Seeing Final Fantasy on your shelf made my day!
You’re A gentleman and a scholar good sir
Is this comparative govt or us govt
8:23 *insert wondering Florida man meme here*
Even though I'm in fact a Florida man I take no offense to this
Carey LaManna I also live in Florida 😂
When Marbury sued Madison, was he just trying to get back at him for not giving him his job back? Im kind of confused between the connection of the facts of the case and the holding.
Yeah the facts to holding is pretty loose on this one. Marbury sued so that the Supreme Court would FORCE Madison (Secretary of State) to give him his job. But the Supreme Court Chief Justice knew that if he ruled for Marbury that Madison would have just refused to give him the job anyway and now the Court would look super weak. So instead the SC ruled that the law that gave Marbury the right to sue at the Supreme Court was unconstitutional. This was the first use of judicial review. So basically instead of ruling on whether Madison had to give Marbury a job the SC instead ruled the Judiciary Act unconstitutional, establishing judicial review.
good luck everyone! I'll help with the 50% who fail to boost your odds of being in the 50% who pass.
Good luck to you too!!!
it was actually extremely easy I'm sure I passed :D
@@nyoom9814 I saw Taylor on there and lost it lol
@@sageriel76 Easiest FRQs of my life. Half of them were just restating what the document says / graph
@@nyoom9814 yeah it wasn’t as bad as I thought it was going to be. I took calculus today though and that was yikessss
i dont think im pulling through for this one yall
Me neither dude. This is it for me
@therealTDjo yknow what, last minute cramming, lets go 🗣 atleast a 3
@@b00dou_ At least a three 🗣️🗣️
i just started studying the test is in 8 hours
@@watermelonbanana1772 goodluck! mine is in 4 hrs now 😖 i just slept bc i had a killer headache...
LaMoney I believe these belong to u 👑🏰
Thank you King
This guy is the GOAT
Do we need to know Citizens United vs. FEC @Carey LaManna
Not this year
i did zero studying for ap gov yesterday besides these videos in the car on the way to school
Did his videos help on the exam?
@@yuriash5615 yes 😂
@@ginamcmanama2018thank you
late exam in t-minus 20 minutes. thanks boss
33 minutes till the exam and I finally show up.
Best of luck to you.
I decided to binge-watch these videos on the day of the exam and am now realizing my AP gov teacher did not teach us any of this or anything about any of our required documents :| he didn't even teach us how to write the argumentative essay or FRQ. rip.
How did you do on your exam? My entire school year was online and a lot of students and teachers just got lazy. My exam is in 5 days and I'm just trying to cram as much as I can now. My AP Gov teacher was useless. All he did was play news videos in class. Barely practiced the exam. Only practiced a few MCQs and no FRQs or the essay. He didn't didn't go over the book in class. It's absolutely ridiculous. He's just setting the class up for failure.
watching this hours before the exam
Good morning to my 2023 kids
i have 6 hours.
This video really helped! Thanks
No problem!
could you talk about precedents?
Ummm I can lol. Precedents are are when the Court makes a ruling and that ruling then guides future rulings based on the principles of the first one. The Court typically follows precedent (stare decisis) but has the ability to overrule itself and create new precedent.
My ap test is Thursday 😅
Taking the online test tomorrow 🥲😅 thank you for ur help lmao
I love this man
who else out here studying 17 minutes before the test
This video was so helpful thnx 😊
here right before my test 🕺
You are a blessing
Good morning ap government kids
yoooo 😂
Watching it 2 hours before the exam to review...
Only an hour and a half left...Good luck everyone!!!!!!
Thank you. You are the best
:)
GL on exam tomorrow bois
Thank you Carey preciate it homie
the legend saving our AP scores
thanks for this! saving my ass out here 🤣
Sooo helpful! Thanks so much!
2021 gov students, how we feeling?😬
Bro I am beyond fucked 😅
I am cramming right now and I'm gonna cry
bad lol
@@pearlescent1557 I just finished my exam. Surprisingly, it was pretty easy for me, and if you haven’t taken yours, good luck!