Difference between revisions of "Template:Featured articles"

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Revision as of 08:50, 17 March 2013

Caveman.jpg This template is now obsolete and should no longer be embedded in any Gunsopedia pages. To fulfill the functions this template once served, you should now use the AOTD system instead instead.

About this template

This template is used to generate a random display of a snippet of one of the GOROLE's featured articles on the main page. As it is a prime content template, there are a few things that should be kept in mind:

  1. This is a site template which should NOT be modified in any way by those who are not GOROLE sysops or admins. If by some chance you should find that you are able to alter this template but you are not a site sysop, please notify the admins ASAP.
  2. This template should NOT be confused with the "Featured article" (singular, not plural) template, which is used to tag an article as being featured.
  3. If you have an article that you think should be included in the featured list, this is one of the places where you can bring that up. Simply go to the discussion page for this template and make your case there.


The template

Below is a sample of what the template contents will look like on the main page:


District of Columbia, et al. v. Dick Anthony Heller

Dick Heller outside the US Supreme Court House.
There can be little doubt that the case of the District of Columbia v. Dick Heller is, and will remain for some time, the most important SCOTUS ruling on the subject of gun rights in American history.

"Gun control" advocates had long argued that the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution was a state right and not an individual one, but in this landmark legal case, the Supreme Court of the United States held that the Second Amendment protects an individual's right to possess a firearm for private use.

For the first time in its history, the Supreme Court of United States directly addressed whether the right to keep and bear arms is a right of individuals or a collective right that applies only to state-regulated militias.

To the dismay of gun-grabbers across the nation, the Court found in favour of the side of true rights, liberty, and the individual.

(click here to read more about the case of District of Columbia v. Heller)

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