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Testy Po Obshchestvoznaniiu 9 Klass Bogoliubov S 35 Paragrafa May 2026

Suddenly, he wasn't in his bedroom. He was standing in a massive, sun-drenched atrium. Before him stood three towering doors.

Maksim found himself in a small courtyard where two neighbors were screaming over a broken fence."He must go to jail!" one yelled.Maksim remembered the paragraph. "Wait! This is a civil matter, not criminal. You’re looking for compensation, not a prison sentence."The neighbors froze, nodded, and vanished. The first door creaked open. Suddenly, he wasn't in his bedroom

The final room was silent. The Arbiter stood there. "If a law violates the Constitution, who has the final word?"Maksim didn't hesitate. "The Constitutional Court. They protect the supreme legal force of the land." Maksim found himself in a small courtyard where

The Arbiter smiled, handed Maksim a golden pen, and everything dissolved. You’re looking for compensation, not a prison sentence

Maksim woke up with a start. The textbook was still open to page 184. He grabbed a piece of paper and began writing down the hierarchy of courts—not because he had to, but because he finally saw how the machine of justice worked.

The text was a blur of "jurisdiction," "appeals," and "presumption of innocence." Rubbing his eyes, Maksim drifted off, his head resting on the cold glossy page.

Maksim was now in a somber courtroom. A teenager stood accused of theft, looking terrified. The prosecutor was shouting, "He can't prove he's innocent!"Maksim jumped up. "He doesn't have to! Paragraph 35 says the presumption of innocence is foundational. You have to prove he’s guilty beyond a reasonable doubt."The prosecutor turned into a cloud of ink, and the second door swung wide.