Political Science, asked by MahimaMor, 1 year ago

difference between fundamental and ordinary rights

Answers

Answered by sunaina37
5

Fundamental Rights are protected and Guaranteed bythe Constitution and they cannot be taken away by anordinary law enacted by thelegislature. ... Thus theremedy itself is afundamental right. This distinguishes it from otherrights.The Supreme Court isthe guardian of fundamental rights.

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Answered by donkeymayo
0

Answer: Well first and foremost, we don't have any rights right now as we don't have the freedom of speech, the freedom of exercise, the freedom to go to work, and the freedom to go anywhere, wherever and whenever we want. We don't have the right to hold funerals, weddings, birthday parties, or even just go for a walk with a friend. We don't have the right to travel, to say and write what we think, to protest, and to go to church. We don't have the right to sue or have court cases heard as the courts are shut down. We don't even have the right to run our small businesses and go to a restaurant. I thought these were fundamental rights, but I suppose that we are all wrong. Our only right is to listen to the CDC and WHO, panic buy toilet paper, hand sanitizer, and beans, and watch Netflix while 5G is rolled out around the world. Fundamental rights are rights that cannot be taken away and are signed into law as permanent, such as the Constitution of the Unites States and the Bill of Rights. Ordinary rights are whatever rights the government thinks we should have.

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