First Amendment Essay

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    When the constitution was first made, a few people called the Anti-Federalists demanded that we had a bill of rights so that the government would take over at any moment. The bill of rights had originally 10 amendments, which still exist today. The most important amendment to me, is the first. It states that citizens have freedom of speech,press,religion,assembly and petition. This amendment has affected my life, affects our nation, and it also isn’t obeyed by everyone at all times. As an American

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    was signed on September 17, 1787 and presented by George Washington. Based on the Constitution there is articles and amendments missing in the novel 1984 and how those missing amendments and articles make our society free and democratic. The constitution is a treaty between government and citizens, it would it be catastrophic if someone would have absolute power amount us. “First thing to realize is that power is collective...the second is that power is power over human beings, over the body, but

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    Essay about Censorship

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    Are we protected from censorship under the First Amendment? In other words do people or groups have the right to examine material and remove or prohibit anything they consider objectionable? This argument has been progressing for hundreds of years, the first notable case was against John Peter Zenger, in 1743. Zenger was an editor of a New York colonial newspaper that often published articles that criticised the colony's governor. He successfully argued that publishing the truth should be a defense

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    In the case "Procunier v. Martinez," there are several issues raised. The main issue is the first amendment. The first amendment states that all citizens have the right to freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and freedom of the press. Even though an inmate is incarcerated, they still have the freedom to speak freely. Being behind the prison walls, basically takes away all of inmates ability to communicate freely. It also affects their human spirit. Inmates did not want to be in trouble for expressing

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    by a group of police who arrested the protesters for “breach of the peace” after they refused to disperse, and sang patriotic songs. The supreme court decided in favor of the protesters and said that the arrests violated the protesters First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Anthony Lewis would definitely agree with the Supreme Court’s decision, because the decision upheld the protester’s rights to free speech and expression since the protesters were not causing any physical harm. Lewis opinion throughout

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    too powerful. The other purpose of the constitution was to resolve disputes between the federal government and the state government. In the first versions of the Constitution, there were many examples of what the government was allowed to do, but there were not any examples of what the government was not allowed to

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    and 14, Civil Liberties and Civil Rights, in the eighth edition textbook, American Government, by Cal Jillson. Chapter 13, Civil Liberties, discusses the origins of the Bill of Rights, Freedom of Expressions, Freedom of Religion, and other topics. First, each chapter, individually, will be introduced before reviewing and analyzing each topic within the chapter. There will be a switch from an objective point to a subjective point once I begin to review and analyze each topic. After reviewing and analyzing

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    Hutchens American Government 17 April 2017 This paper will be about the 1st amendment of the Bill of Rights (Amendment 1-10 of the United States Constitution). Along with talking about the 1st amendment, this paper will include court cases from all five parts of this amendment. The Bill of Rights was approved on September 25, 1789, however, it was not ratified until December 15, 1791. The first ten amendments of the United States Constitution are known as the bill of rights. The Bill of rights

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    protect journalists. Reporter 's privilege in the United States is the protection that a reporter has under constitutional law from being forced to reveal their confidential information or sources in court. It may be described in the US as the First Amendment right given to journalists to protect their private sources from being exposed. There are certain states that have held that a qualified reporter’s privilege exists, but the standards from each place differ. In U.S. v. Sterling, the United States

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    read in the Bill of Rights in the First Amendment the following: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and to petition the government for a redress of grievances” ("Bill of Rights - Bill of Rights Institute." Bill of Rights Institute). How do these “Clauses” protect us within the First Amendment? Do we really have “freedom of speech”

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