History, asked by ashish37688, 1 year ago

write a note on the protection of human rights act ​

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Answered by arnabtherockstar
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Answer:

Human rights are fundamental inalienable rights that you have just by virtue of the fact that you are a person. Although the government can pass laws to protect your human rights, human rights are rights believed to be granted by God or by some higher power and everyone has human rights even if legislation doesn't protect them or if oppressive governments do not respect them.

Fundamental Human Rights

Human rights are the most fundamental and important of rights. They are the rights that the government in the United States spelled out in the Bill of Rights and the Constitution, and they are the rights that the United Nations aims to protect for all people. These rights would exist even without government protection or intervention.

Some examples of human rights include:

The right to life

The right to liberty and freedom

The right to the pursuit of happiness

The right to live your life free of discrimination

The right to control what happens to your own body and to make medical decisions for yourself

The right to freely exercise your religion and practice your religious beliefs without fear of being prosecuted for your beliefs

The right to be free from prejudice on the basis of race, gender, national origin, color, age or sex

The right to grow old

The right to a fair trial and due process of the law

The right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment

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