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Ch. 4

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Title: Ch. 4


1
Ch. 4
  • Amendments to the Constitution

2
The First Amendment
  • The Bill of Rights, which was added to the
    Constitution in 1791, protects our civil
    liberties
  • the freedoms we have to think and act without
    government interference or fear of unfair
    treatment

3
The First Amendment
  • The 1st Amendment protects five basic freedoms
  • Religion
  • Speech
  • Press
  • Assembly
  • Petition

4
Freedom of Religion
  • Congress may not establish a official religion,
    favor one religion over another, or treat people
    differently because of their beliefs
  • People may practice their faith as they wish
  • Thomas Jefferson referred to it as a, wall of
    separation between church and state

5
Freedom of Speech
  • In some countries, people can be jailed for
    criticizing the government or voicing unpopular
    ideas.
  • We are guaranteed the right to say what is on our
    minds, privately or publicly, without fear of
    punishment
  • Freedom of speech includes conversations, radio,
    and T.V. also protects forms of expression
    ex. Tinker v. Des Moines (1965)

6
Freedom of Press
  • As American citizens, we are free to express
    ourselves in print or other media.
  • Media includes radio, T.V., and computer networks
    (blogs)
  • The government can not practice censorship, or
    ban printed materials or film because they
    contain offensive ideas
  • Also are prohibited from banning information
    before it is published or broadcast.

7
Freedom of Press
  • 1733, John Peter Zenger, publisher for the New
    York Weekly Journal was arrested and imprisoned
    for criticizing Gov. William Crosby (NY).
  • Zengers lawyer argued that only a free press to
    criticize could prevent the government from
    abusing its power.
  • There are some restrictions you can not publish
    materials that can harm a persons character or
    reputation if its based on fact, its fair game

8
Freedom of Assembly
  • We may gather in groups for any reason, as long
    as the assemblies are peaceful.
  • Government can make rules about when and where
    activities can be held but cannot ban them
    outright.
  • We may freely join clubs, political parties,
    unions and other organizations as we wish.

9
Freedom of Petition
  • We all have the right to petition the government
  • We can express our ideas and complaints about
    government action
  • Ex. Complain about the traffic situation on
    Brawley School Road.
  • Get other like minded people to sign a petition
    (written request) to pressure leaders into action

10
Limits to the 1st Amendment
  • The Supreme Court has decided that the 1st
    Amendment is not an absolute freedom and has to
    be limited in scope to protect safety and
    security.
  • You may not say anything that may provoke a riot.
  • You may not write or speak in a way that leads to
    criminal activities or any effort to overthrow
    the government

11
Limits to the 1st Amendment
  • People should use civil liberties responsibly and
    not interfere with the rights of others. Ex. You
    are free to assemble but not in the middle of 150
  • You may criticize government officials but you
    can not spread lies that can harm a persons
    reputation.
  • Doing so is a crime called slander if lies are
    spoken, and libel if lies are printed.

12
Limits to the 1st Amendment
  • The First Amendment was never intended to give
    people unlimited freedom or allow them to do
    whatever they want.
  • The rights of one individual must be balanced
    against the rights of others and the community
  • When there is a conflict, the rights of the
    community will always come first, or society
    would break apart.

13
Other Guarantees in the Bill of Rights Ch.4.2
Rights of the Accused
  • The right to fair legal treatment is just as
    important to our civil liberties.
  • Without these protections, government could
    ransack our homes, drag us to jail, and hold a
    trial without you responding to the charges.
  • The 4th, 5th, 6th, and 8th amendments prevent
    this from happening

14
The Fourth Amendment
  • The fourth amendment protects us against
    unreasonable searches and seizures.
  • Cannot search your home or property without
    probable cause.
  • If police believe you have committed a crime,
    they can ask a judge for a search warrant court
    order allowing law enforcement officials to
    search a suspects home or business and take
    evidence.
  • Ex. Mapp v. Ohio (1961)

15
The Fifth Amendment
  • The fifth amendment gives us protections in a few
    ways
  • - states that no person can be put on trial for a
    serious federal crime without an indictment, a
    formal charge by a group of citizens called a
    grand jury, who review the evidence.
  • An indictment does not mean guilt, but it
    indicates that the person may have committed a
    crime

16
The Fifth Amendment (cont.)
  • protects a person from double jeopardy
  • people can not be tried and judged for the same
    crime twice.
  • Ex. O.J. could not be tried again in California
    for the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and
    Ronald Goldman when he was acquitted the first
    time.

17
The Fifth Amendment (cont.)
  • Protects the accused by giving them the right to
    remain silent
  • Prevents authorities from threatening, torturing,
    or coercing people into a confession.
  • Cannot force people to testify against themselves
  • Protection against self-incrimination
  • ex. Miranda v. Arizona (1966)

18
The Fifth Amendment (cont.)
  • States that no one may be denied life, liberty,
    or property without due process
  • Must follow established legal procedures

19
The Fifth Amendment (cont.)
  • Limits the governments power of eminent domain
    the right of the government to take private
    property for public use
  • If your house lies in the way of a proposed
    government works project, government must give
    you fair price for it.
  • Limits this process.

20
The Sixth Amendment
  • Guarantees additional rights to people accused of
    crimes.
  • - requires accused people to be told the charges
    against them (writ of habeas corpus)
  • - requires that the accused be allowed a trial by
    jury, unless the accused chooses a judge instead
    (bench trial)

21
The Sixth Amendment (cont.)
  • If the accused asks for a jury trial, it must be
    speedy and public, with jurors being impartial.
  • If possible the trial should take place in the
    same area in which the crime took place.

22
The Sixth Amendment (cont.)
  • The accused have the right to hear and question
    witnesses who testify against them.
  • They also have the right to call witnesses in
    their own defense
  • Accused people are entitled to a lawyer/counsel
  • Supreme Court ruled that if a person can not
    afford a lawyer, the government must provide one
    and pay his/her fees ex. Gideon v. Wainwright
    (1963)

23
The Eighth Amendment
  • The Eighth Amendment forbids any excessive bail
    and excessive fines
  • Before trial, the accused may stay in jail or pay
    bail, a security deposit.
  • Bail is returned if the person comes to court for
    trial it is forfeited if the person fails to
    appear.
  • Bail must meet the severity of the crime judge
    weighs various factors of the individual

24
The Eighth Amendment (cont.)
  • Also forbids any cruel and unusual punishment
  • Many people disagree on what types of punishments
    are cruel and unusual but generally agree that
    punishment should be proportional to the crime
    committed.
  • Ex. Furman v. Georgia (1972)

25
Other Protections within the Bill of Rights
  • The 2nd amendment is often debated. Some believe
    it only allows states to keep an armed militia.
  • Others believe it guarantees the right of all
    citizens to keep and bear arms.
  • The courts have generally ruled that government
    can pass laws to control, but not prevent, the
    possession of weapons by individuals

26
The Third Amendment
  • The 3rd Amendment states that soldiers may not
    move into private homes without the owners
    consent.
  • Soldiers had done this in colonial times
  • The government is responsible for quartering
    soldiers during war and during peacetime.

27
The Seventh Amendment
  • The 7th amendment concerns civil cases lawsuits
    involving disagreements among people rather than
    crimes.
  • Guarantees the right to a jury trial in civil
    cases involving more than 20. It does not
    require a jury trial however.

28
The Ninth Amendment
  • The 9th Amendment states that citizens have other
    rights beyond those listed in the Constitution.
  • Ex. peoples right to privacy this is not listed
    in the Constitution

29
The Tenth Amendment
  • The 10th Amendment says that any powers the
    Constitution does not specifically give to the
    national government are reserved to the states or
    to the people.
  • Prevents Congress and the President from becoming
    too strong
  • They have only the powers the people give them.

30
Extending the Bill of Rights Ch. 4.3
  • At first the Bill of Rights applied only to
    adult, white males.
  • Also applied only to the national government and
    not to the states or local governments
  • Later amendments and court rulings made the Bill
    of Rights apply to all people and level of
    governments

31
Civil War Amendments
  • The 13th , 14th, and 15th Amendments are also
    known as the Civil War Amendments because they
    extended civil liberties to African-Americans
    during that time period
  • 13th Amendment (1865) officially outlawed
    slavery, freeing thousands of African Americans

32
Civil War Amendments
  • Even after freeing the slaves, this did not
    guarantee them full rights
  • After the Civil War, many southern states passed
    black codes that excluded African Americans
    from certain jobs, limited property rights, and
    placed many restrictions on their lives.

33
Civil War Amendments
  • The 14th Amendment (1868) remedied this situation
    by defining citizens as anyone born or
    naturalized in the United States which included
    African Americans
  • Requires all states to grant citizens equal
    protection of the laws

34
Civil War Amendments
  • Over the years this clause has been used to
    benefit women, the disabled, and other groups
    whose rights have not been protected fairly.
  • The 14th amendment also nationalized the Bill of
    Rights by forbidding state governments from
    interfering with the rights of citizens.

35
Civil War Amendments
  • The last of the Civil War amendments, the 15th
    amendment (1870) says that no state may take away
    a persons voting rights on the basis of race,
    color, or previous enslavement.
  • The amendment was clearly intended to guarantee
    suffrage the right to vote to African
    Americans.
  • Keep in mind, it applied only to men
  • Various states had the power to decide whether
    women could vote. Still regardless of race,
    women could not vote in most federal or state
    elections

36
Later Amendments
  • Gradually, the Bill of Rights came to cover all
    Americans equally and limited the power of
    government at all levels.
  • Additional amendments would extend the rights of
    Americans to participate fully in the democratic
    process (voting rights)

37
The Seventeenth Amendment
  • According to Article I of the Constitution, the
    people were to elect members of the House of
    Rep., but the state legislatures were to choose
    members of the Senate.
  • Ratified in 1913, this amendment allowed voters
    to elect their senators directly.
  • Gave Americans a greater voice in their government

38
The Nineteenth Amendment
  • The Constitution did not grant nor deny women the
    right to vote.
  • This decision was left for the states under the
    reserved powers granted to them by the 10th
    amendment.
  • Some territories such as Wyoming allowed women to
    vote in 1869, national support for womens
    suffrage was slow.
  • Womens suffrage movement started around 1848 in
    NY
  • 19th Amendment (1920) established womens right
    to vote in all elections

39
The Twenty-third Amendment
  • Because Washington, D.C. is a district and not a
    state, the people who lived there were not
    initially allowed to vote in national elections.
  • 23rd amendment (1961) established that citizens
    of D.C. may vote for the President and Vice
    President, just as other Americans do.

40
The Twenty-fourth Amendment
  • The 15th amendment gave African Americans the
    right to vote, but many had trouble exercising
    the right
  • Many southern states had poll taxes, requiring
    voters to pay a sum of money before casting a
    ballot.
  • This was a financial burden for African Americans
    and poor whites no pay, no vote.
  • 24th Amendment (1964) made poll taxes illegal in
    national elections and then two years later, made
    them illegal in state elections

41
The Twenty-sixth Amendment
  • Throughout history, a young man could fight and
    die for his country at the age of 18, but was
    unable to vote for leaders until the age of 21.
  • Constitution does not state an age minimum, this
    was established by the states.
  • 26th Amendment (1971) during the Vietnam War,
    Americans were guaranteed the right to vote at
    the age of 18.
  • Lowered age minimum from 21 to 18.

42
The Civil Rights Struggle Ch. 4.4
  • After the Civil War, African Americans routinely
    faced discrimination, or unfair treatment based
    on prejudice against a certain group.
  • Jim Crow laws passed in the south required the
    social separation of the races which was known as
    segregation.
  • It would take more than 100 years for African
    Americans to secure their civil rights the
    rights of full citizenship and equality under the
    law.

43
Separate but Equal
  • Jim Crow laws had mandated the separate but
    equal status for blacks in America.
  • Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)

44
Beginning to Change
  • Executive Order 9981 (1948) from President Harry
    Truman ordered an end to segregation in the
    nations armed forces.
  • The biggest victory for equality of rights came
    with the decision in 1954.

45
Brown Decision
  • Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS (1954)
  • NAACP lawyers successfully argued that
    segregation in public schools was
    unconstitutional.
  • It violated the 14th Amendments principle of
    equal protection under the law

46
Montgomery Bus Boycott
  • In 1955, one year after the Brown decision, an
    African American woman named Rosa Parks was
    arrested for refusing to give up her seat to a
    white man.
  • Arrested for violating Alabamas segregation laws.

47
Montgomery Bus Boycott
  • Her arrest spurred the local African American
    community to organize a boycott of the
    Montgomery, AL bus system.
  • A year later, Supreme Court ruled that public bus
    segregation was unconstitutional.
  • Rosa Parks and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gained
    national prominence from their actions

48
Peaceful Protests
  • Dr. King was a Baptist minister and one of the
    main leaders of the civil rights movement.
  • His ability to speak and his belief in
    non-violent resistance helped move the cause.
  • King helped organize marches, boycotts, and
    demonstrations that opened people eyes to the
    treatment of blacks and that change was needed.

49
Peaceful Protests
  • Students were known for staging sit-ins at
    lunch counters that served only whites
  • African Americans and whites sympathetic to the
    cause were Freedom Riders who traveled together
    on buses to protest segregation
  • Kings I Have a Dream Speech was and still is
    inspirational to those who hope for racial
    equality.

50
Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • In response to the growing demand for government
    action, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of
    1964.
  • This law prohibited discrimination in
  • - public facilities
  • - employment
  • - education
  • - voter registration

51
Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • It banned discrimination by race, color, gender,
    religion, and national origin.
  • Strengthened the 14th Amendment

52
Other Steps to Equality
  • Ratification in 1964 of the 24th Amendment to
    protect African Americans when it came to
    registering and voting banned poll taxes in
    America.
  • The Voting Rights Act of 1965 ensured all
    citizens the right to vote, regardless of race.

53
Affirmative Action
  • In the 1970s, the federal government created
    programs that were intended to make up for past
    discrimination.
  • These programs encouraged the hiring and
    promoting of minorities and women, and the
    admission of more minority students to colleges.

54
Affirmative Action
  • From the beginning, affirmative action has been
    controversial.
  • Critics complain that affirmative action programs
    give preferential treatment to women and
    minorities, amounting to discrimination against
    men and whites. reverse discrimination

55
Racial Profiling
  • The struggle for equal rights continues today.
  • Each year, the federal government receives more
    than 75,000 complaints of workplace
    discrimination.
  • Many people are subject to racial profiling

56
Racial Profiling
  • Racial profiling is being singled out as suspects
    because of the way they look.
  • Some Americans are also victims of hate crimes
    acts of violence based on a persons race, color,
    national origin, gender, or disability.
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