Disagree with a new law in your town? You can speak up about it. Worship differently than your friends do? You have the right to follow any faith you choose or none at all. Want the latest scoop? Read as many news outlets as you like—or start your own.
We sometimes take these rights for granted, but our nation’s founders did not. Even as they signed the Constitution in 1787, some of the Framers worried that the document didn’t guarantee Americans’ individual freedoms. They wanted to make sure the government they’d created didn’t overstep its bounds.
So James Madison, who had been the main author of the Constitution, wrote the Bill of Rights. Ratified in 1791, the 10 amendments that make up the Bill of Rights protect key individual liberties, such as freedom from unreasonable searches and the right to public trials. The first one on the list, however, is arguably the most vital.
Disagree with a new law in your town? You can speak up about it. Worship differently than your friends do? You have the right to follow any faith you choose or none at all. Want the latest scoop? Read as many news outlets as you like. You can even start your own.
We sometimes take these rights for granted. However, our nation’s founders did not. They signed the Constitution in 1787. But some of them worried the document did not guarantee Americans’ individual freedoms. They wanted to make sure the new government wouldn’t overstep its bounds.
So James Madison, the main author of the Constitution, wrote the Bill of Rights. It was ratified in 1791. The Bill of Rights is 10 amendments that protect key individual liberties. For example, they guarantee freedom from unreasonable searches and the right to public trials. But the first one may be the most important.