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Explore the foundational principles of civil liberties, the Bill of Rights, and the Constitutional guarantees that safeguard individual freedoms against government encroachment. Learn about the interplay between civil liberties and civil rights, including the critical distinctions and their significance in upholding democracy and the rule of law. Discover how constitutional protections shape the rights and responsibilities of American citizens and residents, ensuring a balance between personal freedoms and societal welfare.
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The Declaration of Independence states that people have certain unalienable rights, or individual freedoms that are theirs from birth.
The first ten amendments to the Constitution, known as the Bill of Rights, list these rights.
The Constitution guarantees Americans both civil liberties and civil rights, terms that are often used interchangeably.
However, civil liberties are protections against government acts while civil rights are positive acts of government that uphold the Constitution.
Each constitutional guarantee of civil liberty limits the power of the government.
They may use their freedoms only in ways that do not infringe on others’ rights.
Most constitutional rights belong to all people living in the United States, including aliens—foreign-born residents or noncitizens.
Most of its protections are applied to the State governments by the 14th Amendment’s Due Process Clause.
This clause says that “No State shall…deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”
Through a series of cases, the Supreme Court has engaged in the process of incorporation by which most of the Bill of Rights’ guarantees have been included in the Due Process Clause.
Free expression, including freedom of religion and freedom of the press, is necessary in a free society.
The 1st Amendment guarantees religious freedom through its Establishment Clause and its Free Exercise Clause.
The 14th Amendment’s Due Process Clause protects this freedom from acts of the States.
The Establishment Clause says that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religions….” Thomas Jefferson described the clause as setting up “a wall of separation between church and state.”
The nature of the “wall,” particularly as it applies to education, is not agreed upon and has therefore been the subject of many court cases.
For example, in 1925 the Supreme Court ruled that a State government could not force parents to send their children to public schools instead of private, church-related parochial schools.
In other rulings, the Court has said that public schools may not sponsor religious events.
It has not said, however, that individuals may not pray when and as they choose—in schools or in any other place.
The Free Exercise Clause says that “Congress shall make no law…prohibiting the free exercise [of religion]….” It guarantees to each person that right to believe whatever he or she wishes with regard to religion.
However, no person may act on behalf of those beliefs exactly as he or she chooses.
For example, people may not break laws or harm others while practicing their religion.
The 1st and 14th amendments’ guarantees of free speech and a free press protect a person’s right to speak freely and to hear what others have to say.
However, no person has the right to libel or slander another.
Libel is the false and malicious use of printed words; slander is the false and malicious use of spoken words.
Sedition is the crime of attempting to overthrow or disrupt the government by force or violent acts.
Seditious speech, or the urging of such conduct, is not protected by the First Amendment.
The Supreme Court has limited both seditious speech and obscenity, but it seldom allows the use of prior restraint—the curbing by the government of ideas before they have been expressed.
For instance, reporters do not have a constitutional right to keep their sources confidential.
However, 30 States have passed shield laws, which give reporters some protection against having to disclose their sources or reveal other confidential information in legal proceedings in those States.
The media of radio and television are subject to more regulation than newspapers because they use the publicly owned airwaves to distribute their materials.
Symbolic speech, or communicating ideas by conduct, has been protected by the Supreme Court.
When it is peaceful, picketing, or the patrolling of a business site by striking workers, is one such form of protected conduct.
The 1st and 14th Amendments guarantee the right of Americans to assemble, or gather, to share their opinions on public matters.
The people may organize to influence public policy and to tell public officials what they think.
They may do this through petitions, advertisements, letters, and demonstrations.
People do not have the right to block streets or close schools.
The government may make rules about the time and place of assemblies and about how they are conducted.