In the USA, there used to be laws against miscegenation.
There's no answer to that.
Laws that call for punishments or fines are 'enforced' laws.
No. It's the Congress who write the bills. And the president signs the bills. However, the president is in charge of enforcing laws that Congress has made and he has a great deal of leeway in how or if laws are enforced. He issues directives to federal workers on how to interpret and carry out laws. In that sense, he makes laws.
It is not legal for a President or police force to only enforce laws they choose. All laws that are legal on the books should be enforced by all government and police entities.
Pass laws, declare war, Make sure laws are being enforced, command army Sorry that I couldn't get 7
Loving v. Virginia
Laws are passed and enforced like they are in any part of the world.
Most laws aren't enforced.
Around 1958 anti-miscegenation laws were overturned through Virginia vs Loving. June 14th is a day to recognize biracial black/white marriages.
A pending law will not be enforced until passed by whoever is in charge of pending laws. As soon as the law is passed, it will be put into effect and enforced. by deepika (m.b.b.s.)
Miscegenation (Latin miscere "to mix" + genus "kind") is the mixing of different racial groups, that is, marrying, cohabiting, having sexual relations and having children with a partner from outside one's racially or ethnically defined group.In the United States Miscegentation laws were laws that banned interracial marriage and sometimes sex between members of two different races and were enforced in the Thirteen Colonies from the late seventeenth century onwards, and subsequently in several US states and US territories until 1967.The laws were gradually repealed state-by-state during the period 1948-1967, however, the southern slave states were notoriously slow and some of these states waited till 1998 to fix language in their constitutions.Similar laws were also enforced in Nazi Germany, from 1935 until 1945, and in South Africa during the Apartheid era, from 1948 until 1984.The history of these laws is complex and lengthy. See the related link for a more complete discussion.