That phrase "We the people..." is not in the Declaration of Independence. It is in the US Constitution.
The Constitution does not contain the phrase. It originated from the Declaration of Independence-- written well before the U.S. Constitution, but not included in the Constitution.
The phrase "certain unalienable rights" is not in the U.S. Constitution at all, and so they are not guaranteed. The phrase appears in the Declaration of Independence, at the beginning of the second paragraph: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." Since the Declaration of Independence did only what its title says, declare independence from Britain, and listed the reasons for it, it has no force at law.
The phrase is actually "sign your John Hancock." and comes from the signing of the Declaration of Independence. John Hancock's signature is by far the largest signature on the document; he was also the first to sign the document.
The phrase "we hold these truths to be self-evident" means that the truths mentioned, which come after that famous phrase, do not need to be explained, defended, or rationalized. "Self-evident" means that the thing provides its own justification just because it exists.
Declaration of Independence does.
That phrase "We the people..." is not in the Declaration of Independence. It is in the US Constitution.
The Declaration of Independence
Declaration of Independence
Give me Liberty or give me death. This was a phrase spoken by Patrick Henry who was asking for the Declaration of Independence to get independence for America from England.
life, liberty and the preside of happyness
Parliament
It doesn't connect. The ordinance came after 1776. The Declaration of Independence was a list of problems to the king and declaring independence.
We don't have the phrase you were given so we can't answer the question.
All men are created equal (Declaration of Independence).
Nothing in the Declaration of Independence refers to the Tea Act. But the Tea Act was to protest England's monopoly on American trade which is one of the main reasons why the Declaration of Independence was written.
The decloration of independance