Your Rights and Freedoms

Your rights and freedoms form the foundation of American democracy, protecting against government overreach and ensuring equal treatment. The Bill of Rights—first 10 amendments to the Constitution—guarantees liberties like freedom of speech, press, religion, assembly, and petition, plus due process and reserved powers for states and people[1][2][3].

Constitutional Rights and Freedoms

The First Amendment protects religion, speech, press, assembly, and petition, though courts define limits[1][2][8]. When government officials post content online, rules differ from private citizens. A Texas teachers’ social media case may limit targeting. The Speech or Debate Clause shields lawmakers, while immigrant speech restrictions spark debate.

Privacy and Search Protections

The Fourth Amendment bars unreasonable searches and seizures for all[1][2][4]. During immigration sweeps, protections hold. Federal agents need reasonable suspicion in many cases.

Civil Rights and Equal Protection

Federal laws combat discrimination; DOJ selects cases carefully[1]. Learn DOJ criteria, prosecutor discretion, and suing options when DOJ won’t act. Brady v. Maryland mandates misconduct disclosure. Title VI and Title IX cases evolve[1].

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Civil Disobedience vs. Lawful Protest: Your Rights and Responsibilities

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Public Participation vs. Representative Democracy: How Americans Shape Government

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