History, asked by georgerod1026, 1 month ago

how does the bill of rights protect the unalienable rights of ''life liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" listed in the declaration of independence?

Answers

Answered by rudrarajsingh887
1

Answer:

The Bill of Rights protects citizens' basic freedoms, such as freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of religion, freedom before the law, and several other important individual liberties. ... By listing them explicitly, the Bill of Rights ensures these rights will be protected.

Explanation:

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Answered by mysterious0115
0

Answer:

The Bill of Rights protects citizens' basic freedoms, such as freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of religion, freedom before the law, and several other important individual liberties. ... By listing them explicitly, the Bill of Rights ensures these rights will be protected.

Unalienable rights force the government to expand and protect all rights

Unalienable rights force the government to place no restrictions on liberty

Unalienable rights force the government to act within certain boundaries

Unalienable rights force the government to ignore competing rights

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