How can the Constitution be changed and how did the Bill of Rights affect the Ratification of the Constitution? (Article V, Amendments 1-10)
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How can the Constitution be changed and how did the Bill of Rights affect the Ratification...
VI. Why did the Bill of Rights get added to the Constitution and how were the specific amendments meant to protect the liberties of people from government power? min of 12 senetences
Besides the Bill of Rights, the most common topics of the rest of the amendments to the Constitution are who can vote and states' powers who can vote and presidential elections states' powers and provisions for searches states' powers and presidential elections
The bill of rights was added after the ratifixation of the constitution of the constitutional convention. Explain how this process worked and why it happened in this order.
Submit a reflection on the Constitution, Bill of Rights or Decl. of Independence
1. How many amendments were added to the Constitution in the twentieth century? 2. Describe the four possible methods of formal amendment. 3. In your own words, describe three freedoms protected by the Bill of Rights.
After reading the part of the constitution known as the Bill of Rights, explain its purpose.
Question 1 [The Constitution] is made for people of fundamentally differing views, and the accident of our finding certain opinions natural and familiar or novel and even shocking ought not to conclude our judgment upon the question whether statutes embodying them conflict with the Constitution of the United States. This quote from the 1905 dissent to the Lochner v. New York decision tells us that Question 1 options: a) the Constitution contains nothing shocking. b) the divisions among people will...
1. To what extent was there a struggle over ratification of the Constitution by The Federalists and The Anti-Federalists? 2. Why were Americans, particularly Northerners and Southerners, so divided over states rights and the creation of a strong central government? 3. Why was there such a struggle over ratification of the Constitution? 4. What significance can you take from the fact Thomas Jefferson was not at the Constitutional Convention in the Summer of 1787?
6. The Bill of Rights (first 10 Amendments to the US Constitution) consists of several limitations on the power of the government. The Fifth Amendment states, among other things, that: “No person shall ... be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law .” What does this mean? a. The government cannot take someone’s life without paying compensation to their family. b. The government must follow a fair legal procedure before taking away someone’s life, or freedom, or...
The Constitution and Bill of Rights are housed at the.... O The Smithsonian Museum O The National Archives O The White House O The Supreme Court Building QUESTION 4 The concept that courts will continue to rely on prior cases to ensure consistency in the law is called.... Original jurisprudence O lex talionis O stare decisis O Venue QUESTION 5 State's penal codes contain arch hp