On July 9, 1868 the fourteenth amendment was adopted to the United States constitution. The basic purposes of the fourteenth amendment were to provide more equality to people in the United States, included in the amendment were things like making all people born or naturalized within the United States citizens. The amendment also includes “ No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person…
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The Fourteenth Amendment of the US Constitution helps protect the right of citizens to keep personal behavior and matters private. However, when it comes to a child, parents have the right to say if the child can. The child has to get the parents permission to do any procedures. In a doctors office they have to get the parents to consent to do any procedures for the child. The only time the child can do anything without the parent if it comes to birth control or pregnancy. In the state of Minnesota…
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question A, as I talked about the ups and downs of the amendments and how long it took to get where we are today as a country, which right now seems to be at somewhat of a standstill when it comes to race and equal protection under the law. To me, it is clear, that the 14th amendment has kept its promise at times and completely ignored it at others. Yet, what is scary is that there doesn’t seem to be a particular timetable as to when the promise of the 14th is kept and when it isn’t. But the question remains…
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respect. Everyone should be entitled to a quality of life, no matter who they may be or what their ethnicity is. In the article "14th amendment ratified," it states that " the amendment was designed to grant citizenship to, and protect the civil liberties of, recently freed slaves." This meant that they would be able to have similar rights as white people and the amendment was supposed to allow them to surpass limitations that were once put in their way. Although this "allowed" them to do things they…
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I’m intrigued by the correlation you make between “interpretation of the 14th Amendment” and “civil right”, particularly since the word civil rights are not in the 14th Amendment. The 14th Amendment is broken down into three separate yet distinctive segment. First, the 14th Amendment deals with determining citizenship for the United States (U.S. Const. Amend 14). Secondly, the due process clause pertains to our 1st amendment right not being taken away by the government without “due process” (U.S…
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According to, The Washington Post, repealing the 14th Amendment is “nearly impossible.” President Trump is urging to repeal the 14th Amendment along with Wisconsin’s Senator Scott Walker. In the data made by The Washington Post, President Trump would need to convince 13 Democratic Senators to join his cause along with 44 Democratic representatives. He would need this amount of Representatives and Senators to get two-thirds or a fifth of the House’s approval needed on both sides of Capitol Hill. Among…
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The Equal Rights Amendment prevents denial of rights on the basis of sex. According to Noble, (2012) Alice Paul, leader of the National Woman’s Party (NWP), proposed in 1921 that “Men and Women shall have equal rights throughout the United States,” she initiated a constitutional struggle that continues to this day. Nearly half a century of determined campaigning, the reworded Equal Rights Amendment was finally approved by Congress in 1972. The Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) was intended to enforce…
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Wade-Davis bill unable to become an actual law. Before Lincoln’s assassination and after the Emancipation Proclamation, the 13th amendment passed by the Senate and House, this abolished all slavery in the United States. This amendment demonstrated how the people in the government were able to realize the inhumanity of slavery. However, the ratification of the amendment came on December 6, 1865, after Lincoln’s passing. Lincoln April 15, 1865, just a day after being assassinated by John Wilkes Booth…
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Wade-Davis bill unable to become an actual law. Before Lincoln’s assassination and after the Emancipation Proclamation, the 13th amendment passed by the Senate and House, this abolished all slavery in the United States. This amendment demonstrated how the people in the government were able to realize the inhumanity of slavery. However, the ratification of the amendment came on December 6, 1865, after Lincoln’s passing. Lincoln April 15, 1865, just a day after being assassinated by John Wilkes Booth…
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