About like over quite a few million a year...
That depends on which court you're referring to. In the federal court system, the US Supreme Court sets binding (or mandatory) precedent for all lower courts; the US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts set binding precedent for all US District Courts within their jurisdiction, but only persuasive precedent elsewhere; the US District Courts do not set binding precedent at all, they only set persuasive precedent.
The US paid Colombia $25 million for the loss of Panama.
not enough :)
Though I am not sure how much, yes they do get paid.
Since 2001, when the presidential salary was raised, the US president is paid $400,000 plus expenses. Thus, that is what he was paid in 2010.
about $400,000 a year
Depends on the the country. In the US their are paid in dollars. US- avg. pay is about $60,000 http://degreedirectory.org/articles/What_is_the_Average_Salary_of_a_Sociologist.html
he gets paid around 1 and a half million US dollars
It isn’t seen as a precedent for future government. The government was well established when it was written.
About $7.50/hr
$199,700 was the 2011 salary.
In the US it averages about $12 an hour.