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Civil Liberties {Freedoms}

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John Locke Natural Rights. Rights and freedoms that should be afforded to all humans ... State pays for parochial busing (Everson v. Board of Education) 1947 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Civil Liberties {Freedoms}


1
Civil Liberties Freedoms
  • Amendment I

2
  • Civil Liberties come from Natural Rights. Natural
    Rights come from God or Nature

3
Unalienable Rights
  • John Locke Natural Rights
  • Rights and freedoms that should be afforded to
    all humans
  • Therefore HUMAN RIGHTS

4
  • What is the difference between civil liberties
    and civil rights?

5
Civil Liberties are
  • Protections against government

6
Civil Rights are
  • Protection by government from all others in
    society

7
Limited Rights and Freedoms
  • rights/freedoms are relative
  • to the rights of others
  • peace time vs. war time
  • rights for immigrants/aliens (all persons)
  • Should they have the same?

8
Federalisms Complications
  • Bill of Rights created to protect the citizens
    from the Central Government
  • However The 14th Amendment declares
    constitutional protection from state governments
    too

9
9th Amendment
  • REMEMBER
  • There are more rights than those listed in the
    constitution.

10
  • The 6 civil freedoms listed in the 1st amendment
    of the United States Constitution

11
First Amendment
  • Congress shall make no law respecting an
    establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
    free exercise thereof or abridging the freedom
    of speech, or of the press or the right of the
    people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
    government for a redress of grievances.

1 2 3 4 5 6
12
Freedom of Religion
  • Not freedom from religion
  • No government establishment of religion
  • No governments arbitrary interference in the
    expression of religion

13
Separation of Church and State
  • Jefferson quote (not constitutional)
  • Religion free from taxes
  • Chaplains
  • Congress opens in prayer
  • Currency In God We Trust

14
Religion and Education
  • State pays for parochial busing (Everson v. Board
    of Education) 1947
  • Released time (Zorack v. Clauson) 1952
  • Religious groups can meet in school before/after
    class

15
However
  • The Supreme court has handed down many rulings
    (precedents) for schools in the past 60 years to
    insure separation of church and state

16
Prayer/Bible reading
  • No prayer in school - even if considered
    voluntary (Engle v. Vitale)
  • No reading from the bible or prayer to start the
    day (Abington school District v. Schempp)
  • No Ten Commandments can be posted in school
    (Stone v. Graham)

17
Prayer/Bible reading
  • No meditation or moment of silence at the
    beginning of each day, Wallace v. Jaffree 1985
  • No prayer as part of graduation (Lee v. Weisman)

18
Prayer/Bible reading
  • No student lead prayers at sporting events like
    football games. (Santa Fe ISD v. Doe) 2000

19
However
  • There has been no ruling on the use of the Bible
    as a literary or historical source in schools.

20
Evolution Being Taught
  • 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial
  • Must be able to teach (1968)
  • Some schools can force creation science if they
    teach evolution.

21
The Lemon TestWhen is government involvement
with religion OK?
  • Must clearly have a secular purpose (tradition)
  • Can not enhance nor inhibit religion
  • Avoid an excessive entanglement of gov/relig

22
Free Exercise Limits
  • No polygamy (Reynolds v. US)
  • Vaccination (Jacobson v. Mass.)
  • Forbid poisonous snakes (Bunn v. N. Carolina)
  • Must obey child labor laws (Prince v. Mass.)
  • stop

23
What can you remember about the 2 religious
clauses in the 1st Amendment?
24
Freedom of Speech
  • Protects unpopular views
  • There are restrictions
  • Libel- false, malicious printed words
  • Slander- false, malicious spoken words

25
Seditious Speech
  • Advocating or urging the disruption of legal
    governmental duties by force or violent acts.
  • John Adams, WWI
  • Schenk v. U.S. O.K. -War

26
Obscenity Free Speech
  • Not constitutional
  • Outlawed in the mail
  • However, what is obscenity?

27
Miller v. California Defines Obscene
  • Average person thinks it appeals to prurient
    interest
  • Prurient lustful
  • Patently offensive
  • Lacks serious literary, artistic, political or
    scientific value.

28
Symbolic Speech
  • Facial expression, or armband, etc.. (Tinker v.
    Des Moines School District) 1969
  • Burn draft cards (U.S. v. OBrian) 1968
  • Burn the American Flag (Texas v. Johnson) 1989

29
Freedom of Press
  • No solid source confidentiality
  • State shield laws do protect some confidentiality
    (30 states)
  • Radio and television use public airwaves
    (property) therefore more regulations (less
    freedom)

30
Freedom of Assembly
  • Only regulate time, place, and manner not
    content!
  • Not true on Private Property
  • ex. Shopping malls
  • States rule on these matters

31
Freedom of Petition
  • Write to the government and tell them how you
    think the government should do certain things,
    even if it is the opposite of the government

32
HEY, YOU!!!
  • Do you know your civil freedoms?
  • Or
  • Are they being violated by government
    institutions?

33
The End
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