What is the main difference between the laws of a state and the rule of law?
State law is the body of laws for a state, but the rule of law is a principle.
Laws are for the people of the state, but the rule of law is for officials.
Government makes state laws, but the rule of law is from the past.
Laws are from the state’s past, but the government makes the rule of law.
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Here the idea is simple: there are some laws in place, whose content is reasonably clear and known to the people to whom the laws apply. A rule-by-law system exists when the laws in place are reliably applied, subject only to the kinds of random and minor deviations that occur in any system operated by human beings.
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Answer:
Laws are for the people of the state, but the rule of law is for officials.
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