Yes.
Side Note: The Constitution is different than the Declaration of Independence.
No, it was the Declaration of Independence that used that term; Jefferson used the quote, but it was Philip Mazzei who said it.
That all men are created equal and will be treated as so.
Slavery had everything to do with the new US constitution. They had to proclaim that all men were created equal, and all of them had inalienable rights. This immediately created a conflict between whites and blacks.
The principle is an important theme throughout the US government. The emphasis in the society is on merit and not on need. For example, candidates for political office do not need to be any particular race or economic background, all citizens could be eligible.
a. the constitution
The line is not in the constitution, but in the Declaration of Independence.
Men are created equal and this is expressed in the Constitution. The Constitution says this outright and is often quoted.
That all men are created equal and will be treated as so.
Everyone. All men are created equal.
The Constitution says that everyone is equal. It stares that everyone should be treated equally, as this is how they were created.
The Indian constitution posits that all people are created equal. The Constitution was meant to create a peaceful and vibrant democracy.
It is not an amendment in the US Constitution that says 'all men are created equal'. It is in the opening statement of the Declaration of Independence.
Hopefully it is 'that all men are created equal'
the u.s. constitution is based on the concept of?
All people are created equal
Slavery had everything to do with the new US constitution. They had to proclaim that all men were created equal, and all of them had inalienable rights. This immediately created a conflict between whites and blacks.
That all men are created equal and they all have inalienable rights.
They treated them equally since all men are created equal...yah...