The first ten amendments are known as the Bill of Rights.
First Amendment: protects the rights of Americans to worship as they please, or to have no religion if they prefer; freedom of speech, freedom of the press.
Second Amendment: ensures citizens and the nation the right to security.
Third Amendment: prohibits the government from forcing people to quarter - to provide shelter for - soldiers in their homes.
Fourth Amendment: reflects the early Americans’ desire to protect their privacy.
Fifth Amendment: contains four major protections for people accused of crimes.
Sixth Amendment: protects the rights of individuals charged with federal crimes to defend themselves in a court trial.
Seventh Amendment: provides for the right to a jury trial in federal courts to settle all disputes about property worth more than $20.
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Twelfth Amendment (1804): corrects a problem that had arisen in the method of electing the president and vice president.
Thirteenth Amendment (1865): outlaws slavery.
Fourteenth Amendment (1868): protects the legal rights of the freed slaves and their descendants.
Fifteenth Amendment (1870): prohibits the government from denying a person's’ right to vote on the basis of race.
Sixteenth Amendment (1913): gives Congress the power to levy individual income taxes
Seventeenth Amendment (1913): states that the people, instead of state legislatures, elect United States senators.
Eighteenth Amendment (1919): prohibits the manufacture, sale, or transportation of alcoholic beverages, concluding a crusade to abolish the use of liquor that began in the 1830s.
Nineteenth Amendment (1920): guaranteed women the right to vote.
Twentieth Amendment (1933): sets new dates for Congress to begin its term and for the inauguration of the president and vice president.
Twenty First Amendment (1933): repealed the unsuccessful Eighteenth
This paper demonstrates the Great Society and how the 24th amendment was in affect during this time. The Great Society was basically a set of domestic program, which was in the administration of the great President Lyndon B. Johnson. President Johnson purpose was to focus on ending poverty, reducing crime, abolishing inequality and improving the environment. Research showed that the Republicans had been committed to dismantling Lyndon’s Great Society. Some had seen the great society as a success while some thought otherwise. Studies have shown that the Great Society had made a huge impact. President Johnson’s programs during the Great Society had increased Social Security benefits, which had greatly aiding the elderly poor, instituted Medicare and Medicaid, health care supports, that even plays a huge role in today’s society. During the month of May 1964, President Johnson had laid his organized agenda for a particular Great
The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. constitution was officially ratified on July 9, 1868 during the reconstruction era. The amendment, along with the 15th and 13th amendments are together, collectively known as the Reconstruction amendments. There was a huge concern that with the increase of representation in Southern states once the three-fifths compromise was no longer in effect would make Southern states more powerful. The Republicans were afraid that the increased Democratic representation from the South would do away with many of the liberties granted to the African-Americans after the war.
The first ten make up what is still today known as the Bill of Rights. They are also the first ten amendments to the Constitution. (Encyclopedia) The Bill of Rights puts limits on government power. So what the Founders looked at as the natural right of a person to speak and worship freely was now protected by the First Amendment’s prevention of Congress from making laws about religion or cutting freedom of speech.
Each amendment of the Bill of Rights grants us different rights. The First Amendment gives us freedom of speech, freedom of press, freedom of religion, the ability to peacefully assemble, and the right to petition the government. The Second gives us the right to bear arms and maintain militias. The Third makes it so that we don’t have to house soldiers in our homes without our consent. The Fourth protects us from unreasonable searches or seizures of ourselves or our possessions. The Fifth gives us the right to due process, gives us the right to a fair trial, protects us from double jeopardy, protects us from incriminating ourselves, and doesn’t allow for the government to seize our property without paying us the market value. The Sixth gives us the right to have a trial by jury and gives us the other rights of the accused. The Seventh allows for us to have a civil trial by jury. The Eighth prohibits the use of excessive bail and prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. The Ninth protects rights that aren’t enumerated in the Constitution, which just means that it protects the rights that have been inferred from other legal rights. The Tenth Amendment makes it so that powers that aren’t given to the United States government by the Constitution are given to the states or the people, unless the powers are prohibited to the
The Amendments were placed in the constitution to give rights and protection to African Americans after the Civil War. All three amendments implemented the essential changes that were desired in the United States: 13 gave blacks freedom, 14 gave blacks citizenship, and 15 gave black men voting rights (Doc A). Since the Civil War just ended and mostly republicans held position in the federal government, they created these amendments because
The 21st amendment is an example of amending the constitution because it amended 2 things; It repealed an amendment, and it added one (The 18th amendment (Itself)). Amending the Constitution means to change the Constitution. Any amendment that is added or subtracted from the Constitution is considered an amend. The 21st amendment is a 2-in-1 amend because it is responsible for 2 changes. The 18th amendment states that transporting, producing, or selling alcohol would be illegal. However, the 21st amendment is the exact opposite. It states that transporting, producing, or selling alcohol would be legal. Because that is the exact opposite, it would repeal the 18th amendment.
This amendment guaranteed the right to vote for all male American citizens regardless of race. It was a step in the right direction but it excluded all women and was so vaguely written that it opened the doors for other problems that would take many years to fix. It led to southern states implementing actions such as poll taxes, literacy tests or grandfather clauses just to stop black people from even getting a chance to vote and take part in politics. These actions didn't just last for months or years it lasted for decades almost an entire century. Poll taxes were not done away with until the 24th amendment was ratified in
The Fourth Amendment grants citizens rights and equal protection of the laws, this law was placed specifically for African Americans. Due to the placement of the Jim Crow Laws in 1965, enabled the Fourth Amendment to probably work. Fifteenth Amendment was placed after the court issue of Plessy V. Ferguson in which states could not deny voting rights to citizens. Plessy V. Ferguson was a great example of society not fully accepting equal rights and still keeping segregation between whites and blacks. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored people set the standard for leaders to stand up against equal rights. (NAACP) and the Brown v. Board of Education Thurgood Marshall fought against the Jim Crow Laws, it ended the segregation but equal rights into total rights to all humans.
Following the civil war Congress passed three amendments. The Thirteenth Amendment was passed by Congress in January 31, 1865. This states that no form of slavery should exist within the United States. Followed by the Fourteenth Amendment which was passed on June 13, 1866; that states that anyone born or naturalized in the United States cannot be denied life, liberty, and property without due process of law. Nor be denied equal protection of the law. Then the Fifteenth Amendment was passed on February 26, 1869 stating that any citizen of the United States regardless of your race should not be
In 1918, forced from the pressure from the public, President Wilson switched his stand on women’s voting rights from objection to support through the influence of Catt, who had a less-combative style than Paul. He began to propose an amendment that gives these women right to vote. Finally, in 1920 the congress issued the nineteenth Amendment which also named the Susan B. Anthony Amendment in order to remember the contribution she dedicated. The Amendment has an essential position in American history. It ended almost a century’s protest for women’s rights.
The 14th amendment, the 15th amendment, the 19th amendment, the 23rd amendment, and lastly the
The first ten Amendments of the Constitution are the Bill of Rights which is a formal statement announcing the rights that the people of the United States had against the government. At the time of its inception, the American people felt additional protection was needed from the federal government, especially after the Constitution was ratified. These protections were later extended by way of the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868 (Davies, 1999).
There are ten Amendments in the Constitution, they are called the Bill of Rights. Each one of the Amendments protects a different right that people liveing the United States have. The Constitution was created in 1791. It took many drafts, but after 116 days on September 17, 1787 the members of Congress finally signed the Constitution (Constitutional FAQ Answer #87, usconstitution.net). James Madison wrote the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights (U.S Founding Fathers, constitution facts.com). Each Amendment, of the Bill of Rights, is important for a different reason. The first Amendment states,” Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances” (1st Amendment, cornell.edu). The first Amendment is very important because it protects the U.S. citizen's freedom of religion, freedom of press, and freedom of speech.
The first amendment is what it means to be a human, and what it means to be able to live your life everyday without any restrictions. It is very important because if we didn't have the right to free speech we wouldn't see any change in this world. You should have the right to be who you are, and believe in anything you want to, and this amendment allows us to do that and be free everyday in our life. The Fifth amendment reads that, "No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in
The 14th and 15th Amendments of the Constitution were passed after the American Civil war and were designed to enfranchise the African American population and bring the country into a new time of acceptance and equality. The 14th amendment of the Untied