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Natural rights built on the concept of "fundamental fairness" :)
They used the doctrine of natural rights built on the concept of "fundamental fairness."
Natural rights built on the concept of "fundamental fairness" :)
Natural rights built on the concept of "fundamental fairness" :)
Natural rights built on the concept of "fundamental fairness" :)
Natural rights built on the concept of "fundamental fairness" :)
The no incorporation justices argued that the Bill of Rights applied only to the federal government, not the states. The plus incorporation justices used the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to extend the Bill of Rights to the states, incorporating them through a process of selective or total incorporation.
They referenced natural rights built on the concept of "fundamental fairness," and the knowledge that some state actions "shock the conscience" because they violated natural rights.
natural rights--rights that no govenrnment can arbitrarily take away
Natural rights built on the concept of "fundamental fairness" :)
John Locke expanded on the idea of natural rights from the English Bill of Rights by including the concept that individuals have inherent rights to life, liberty, and property. He also argued that these rights are universal, unalienable, and independent of government authority.