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FREE ESSAY ON BILL OF RIGHTS

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The Patients' Bill of Rights
This paper discusses the the history and future of The Patients' Bill of Rights. -- 5,770 words; MLA

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This paper debates the necessity that Australia implement a Bill of Rights because the existing system is ill-equipped to meet the needs and demands of a modern democratic society. -- 1,720 words; MLA

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An analysis of the meaning and history of the Bill of Rights. -- 650 words;

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This paper discusses The Bill of Rights as an absolute guarantee of civil liberties for US citizens- with some important exceptions. -- 952 words; MLA

"Origins of the Bill of Rights"
Describing the essence of Leonard Williams Levy's "Origins of the Bill of Rights". -- 2,130 words; MLA

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BILL OF RIGHTS

The Bill of Rights
In the summer of 1787, delegates from the 13 states convened in Philadelphia and drafted
a remarkable blueprint for self-government, the Constitution of the United States. The
first draft set up a system of checks and balances that included a strong executive
branch, a representative legislature and a federal judiciary. The Constitution was
remarkable, but deeply flawed. For one thing, it did not include a specific declaration,
or bill, of individual rights. It specified what the government could do but did not say
what it could not do. For another, it did not apply to everyone. The consent of the
governed meant propertied white men only. The Bill of Rights did not come from a desire
to protect the liberties won in the American Revolution, but rather from a fear of the
powers of the new federal government. 
The Bill of Rights derives from the Magna Carta, the English Bill of Rights, the colonial
struggle against king and Parliament, and a gradually broadening concept of equality
among the American people. The bill of rights is what the people are entitled to against
every government on earth, general or particular, and what no just government should
refuse. The absence of a bill of rights turned out to be an obstacle to the
Constitution's ratification by the states. It would take four more years of intense
debate before the new government's form would be resolved. The Federalists opposed
including a bill of rights on the ground that it was unnecessary. In the end, popular
sentiment was decisive. Recently freed from the despotic English monarchy, the American
people wanted strong guarantees that the new government would not trample upon their
newly won freedoms of speech, press and religion, nor upon their right to be free from
warrant less searches and seizures. So, the Constitution's framers heeded Thomas
Jefferson who argued: A bill of rights is what the people are entitled to against every
government on earth, general or particular, and what no just government should refuse, or
rest on inference. The American Bill of Rights, inspired by Jefferson and drafted by
James Madison, was adopted, and in 1791 the Constitution's first ten amendments became
the law of the land. Early American mistrust of government power came from the colonial
experience itself. Most historians believe that the pivotal event was the Stamp Act,
passed by the English Parliament in 1765. Taxes were imposed on every legal and business
document. Newspapers, books and pamphlets were also taxed. Even more than the taxes
themselves, the Americans resented the fact that a distant government in which they were
not represented imposed them. And they were further enraged by the ways in which the
Stamp Act was enforced.
Armed with writs of assistance issued by Parliament, British customs inspectors entered
people's homes even if they had no evidence of a Stamp Act violation, and ransacked the
people's belongings in search of contraband. The colonialists came to hate these warrant
less searches and they became a rallying point for opposition to British rule. The
protection of rights was not the government's only purpose. It was still expected to
protect the community against foreign and domestic threats, to ensure economic growth,
and to conduct foreign affairs. It was not, however, the government's job to tell people
how to live their lives, what religion to believe in, or what to write about in a
pamphlet or newspaper. In this sense, the idea of individual rights is the oldest and
most traditional of American values. Democracy and liberty are often thought to be the
same thing, but they are not. Democracy means that people ought to be able to vote for
public officials in fair elections, and make most political decisions by majority rule.
Liberty, on the other hand, means that even in a democracy, individuals have rights that
no majority should be able to take away. 
The most common constitutional violations went unchallenged because the people whose
rights were most often denied were precisely those members of society who were least
aware of their rights and least able to afford a lawyer. They had no access to those
impenetrable bulwarks of liberty, the courts. The Bill of Rights was like an engine no
one knew how to start. The ACLU, the NAACP, founded in 1909, and labor unions, whose very
right to exist had not yet been recognized by the courts, began to challenge
constitutional violations in court on behalf of those who had been previously shut out.
This was the beginning of what has come to be known as public interest law. They provided
the missing ingredient that made our constitutional system and Bill of Rights finally
work. Because of this, the Bill of Rights was proves that it did not come from a desire
to protect the liberties won in the American Revolution, but rather from a fear of the
powers of the new federal government.

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