Title: Ch. 4
1Ch. 4
- Amendments to the Constitution
2The 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
3The First Amendment
- The 1st Amendment protects five basic freedoms
- Religion
- Speech
- Press
- Assembly
- Petition
4Freedom 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
5Freedom 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)
6Freedom 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.
7Freedom 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
8Freedom 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.
9Freedom 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
10Limits 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
11Limits 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.
12Limits 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.
13Other 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
14The 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)
15The 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
16The 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.
17The 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)
18The Fifth Amendment (cont.)
- States that no one may be denied life, liberty,
or property without due process - Must follow established legal procedures
19The 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.
20The 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)
21The 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.
22The 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)
23The 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
24The 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)
25Other 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
26The 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.
27The 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.
28The 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
29The 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.
30Extending 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
31Civil 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
32Civil 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.
33Civil 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
34Civil 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.
35Civil 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
36Later 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)
37The 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
38The 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
39The 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.
40The 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
41The 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.
42The 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.
43Separate but Equal
- Jim Crow laws had mandated the separate but
equal status for blacks in America. - Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
44Beginning 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.
45Brown 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
46Montgomery 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.
47Montgomery 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
48Peaceful 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.
49Peaceful 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.
50Civil 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
51Civil Rights Act of 1964
- It banned discrimination by race, color, gender,
religion, and national origin. - Strengthened the 14th Amendment
52Other 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.
53Affirmative 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.
54Affirmative 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
55Racial 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
56Racial 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.