Emily Gaskill
02.05
Within the Bill of Rights and the 10 commandments there’s so much to unfold. But the real part to unfold is what you can see within both and what you don’t see. In the Bill of Rights there’s 39 articles and came out in October 31 of 1783. The 10 commandments has 10 parts to it but it came out 9 years after the bill of rights came into being in December 15 of 1791. The constitution of New Hampshire is all about power and the government. The constitution of the United States is all about trials and rights. The constitution of New Hampshire is more about the government wanting the state to act a certain way without having any wars happen. The constitution of the Bill of Rights heads more towards the people and having them fight for more then what the government wants. The constitution of New Hampshire and the Bill of Rights also has many ways of being certain with each other. Having to protect the people of where they live, having laws that make the land more suitable for others to come and join. Having power in certain places where needed and the rights of where people want to go and having them know that if something happens you have to be able to back yourself up. Having courts decide on someone’s future other then what the people want, having laws that state the ways of people work in the world. The treasure of people being more important towards situations that need help from others. The constitution of New Hampshire and the constitution of the Bill of Rights both show how when you live in a world that declares rights and equals your either on your own or your with everyone else. The documents show that the founding fathers were trying to be able to show everyone that the law is the law. Being with it saves your life and being against it shows people the rope or gun. When the founding fathers wrote the constitution they were thinking about the people that lived in the country, the people that chose certain paths in life. They were wanting people to think about how living with laws would protect them then being apart from others. The founding fathers wanted to prove that