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US government and civics
Course: US government and civics > Unit 3
Lesson 1: The Bill of RightsThe Bill of Rights: an introduction
The Bill of Rights, comprising the first 10 amendments to the U.S. Constitution, safeguards individual liberties and limits government power. Key protections include freedom of speech, religion, and press, the right to bear arms, and due process for those accused of crimes. The ninth and tenth amendments ensure that unlisted rights are retained by the people and that powers not delegated to the federal government belong to the states or the people.
Want to join the conversation?
- why are the bill of rights so important?(2 votes)
- The bill of rights are important because they are pretty much the set of laws which protect people from the government. When the constitution was being made, people worried that the government would pretty much trample on people's rights, and might use the constitution to their advantage. To counter this, the bill of rights was made along with the constitution, in the hope of creating the an equal and perfect system.(2 votes)
- why are the 9th and tenth amendments optional?? () 2:42(1 vote)
- I'm not exactly sure where you're getting this from. The Ninth Amendment states that there are rights that are not mentioned in the Constitution that are still given to the people, and the tenth says that the federal government can only do what the Constitution says it can. Could you please elaborate on what part of this is optional?(4 votes)
- Then why do people still break those admendments(0 votes)
- People don't break them. The amendments don't apply to people. They apply to the government. They protect the people from the government.(5 votes)
- The 9th and 10th amendments are optional, why is that?(1 vote)
- I don't really understand how the Bill of rights is constantly used in courts.(1 vote)
- what is the 1st amendment(1 vote)
- I think the first Amendment is the freedom of speech, religion, assembly, and of the press.(1 vote)
- what would happen if they dident make a bill of rights or rights at all(0 votes)
- @- @ 1:52the video kept breaking out:( 4:02(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Tutor] The Bill of
Rights, as we know it today were the first 10 amendments
to the Constitution and these amendments
guaranteed individual liberty to make sure that citizens
had stated expectation for what the government
could or could not do to them and you can kind of see here
in many of these rights, the legacy of the Revolutionary War and the kinds of government abuses, that citizens in the Colonies had feared. Now I'm going to go
over these very quickly, we'll spend a lot more
time in other videos talking more about these amendments, but I wanna give you an overall sense of what they're driving at. Now the first four amendments guarantee individual liberties, these are freedom of religion,
speech, press, assembly, freedom to ask the government
for redress of grievances or to deal with a problem, that the government may
have caused in your life, the right to bear arms
and assemble militias, state and local militias had
made the Revolutionary War a success for the United States, a ban on quartering soldiers in homes, recall that the Quartering Act, when the British government
said that the Colonies had to put up soldiers in their homes was a major driver of revolution and a ban on unreasonable
search and seizure, that is it would be necessary for the government to get a warrant to enter your home or to
search your belongings. The next four amendments
in the Bill of Rights deal with protections for
people accused of crimes and again, you see the legacy
of the Revolutionary War and the idea that the Crown had had too much power
to persecute individuals, so this includes things like
the right to due process, that is to make sure that all the steps of following the law are taken, a ban on being tried
twice for the same crime, rights to a speedy and public trial, a jury of your peers, to
even have a jury in cases, that don't have to do with violent crimes, but rather civil disputes and a ban on excessive bail and cruel and unusual punishment, basically this is a guarantee that the government will respect
the rights of individuals. Now, one of the arguments made against including a Bill of
Rights in the Constitution was that listing out those rights might then mean that
they were the only rights and that by listing out
these rights in particular, they might be forfeiting
their liberties in other ways, so the ninth and tenth amendments attempt to deal with that worry, they say in the ninth amendment, any right that isn't listed here is still retained by the people, so this is not an exhaustive list, this is not the complete list of all the rights retained by the people and the tenth amendment
is slightly different, but kind of on the same line, they say that if this Constitution
has not delegated a right directly to the federal government, then that right is reserved
to the states or the people, so the federal government can only do the things that are listed
in this Constitution, it is a limited government,
limited by this document. On the other hand, the rights
of the people are unlimited, so if the Constitution doesn't say that the federal government can do it, that's then a right of
the states or the people.