Your Rights and Freedoms

The Constitution protects fundamental rights like speech and debate, privacy from unreasonable searches, and the right to bear arms, limiting government power to safeguard liberty. Civil rights laws enforce equal protection and prohibit discrimination based on race, gender, and other categories.

Constitutional Rights in Action

Freedoms have limits: government officials face different online posting rules, and immigrants may have varying speech protections. During immigration enforcement, Fourth Amendment rights apply to citizens and noncitizens, and federal agents must justify stops.

Civil Rights Enforcement

The DOJ investigates violations, but case selection involves deliberation and prosecutorial discretion. Learn how laws are interpreted; if declined, families may sue officers.

Equal Protection and Accountability

Laws prevent discrimination in education, employment, and services, with courts applying scrutiny levels in equal protection cases, including Title IX and workplace claims. Prosecutors must probe misconduct per Brady v. Maryland, though DOJ approaches vary, as in high-profile deaths.

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Our articles are referenced by .gov and .mil websites as well as trusted think tanks and publications including Brookings, CNN, Forbes, Fox News, Pew Research, Snopes, The Hill, and USA Today.

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How the Supreme Court Decides Equal Protection Cases: Scrutiny Levels, Explained

Twenty-nine states have passed laws banning transgender girls from school sports. On January 13, 2026, the Supreme Court heard arguments…

This Supreme Court Case Could Reshape Title IX Beyond Sports

The Supreme Court will decide in 2026 whether schools can separate bathrooms, locker rooms, and dorms by sex—or whether doing…

Bostock Protected Transgender Workers. Do Students Have the Same Rights?

At stake is more than athletics. How the justices frame these cases will shape how schools handle bathrooms, locker rooms,…

Article I Courts: How America’s Legislative Tribunals Work

The American judicial system is frequently visualized through the lens of the Supreme Court: nine justices in black robes, serving…

Texas Is Targeting Teachers for Social Media Posts. The First Amendment Lawsuit That Could Set New Limits.

More than 350 Texas educators face investigation by state officials for social media posts they made about Charlie Kirk's assassination.…

9th Circuit Strikes Down California’s Open Carry Ban: What It Means for Gun Rights Nationwide

A three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals struck down California's ban on openly carrying firearms in counties…

Federal Workers Sue Over Gender-Affirming Care Policy: What the Lawsuit Claims

A group of federal workers filed a lawsuit representing a group of workers with the same complaint on January 1,…

What the Supreme Court’s Gun-and-Marijuana Case Could Mean for Millions of Cannabis Users

On March 2, 2026, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in a case that forces millions of Americans to choose…