All those rights are protected by the 1st Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
No Constitutional Amendment explicitly enumerates the right to privacy. The right to privacy is implied under the 1st, 4th, 9th, and 14th Amendments. The U.S. Supreme Court first acknowledged a right to privacy in the case Griswold v. Connecticut in 1965, which affirmed the right to marital privacy. The most common argument today deals with Justice Harlan's "substantive due process" justification, which arises from the 14th Amendment due process clause and the 9th Amendment.
The Amendment was not ratified.
The amendment was not ratified.
The purpose of amendment 2 to the Constitution is to protect the rights of a free People to defend themselves from the tyranny of government. The explicit intent of the second amendment is to allow every person to own military style weapons in order to secure for the citizenry the ability to rebel against government tyranny at a moment's notice. The British attempted to disarm the Americans and later, when conflict was anticipated, to seize their military style arms from an arsenal, and since the first act of a tyrannical government is to disarm the citizens, the Founders put this protection in to ensure that military style weapons were free to own and could be kept by every individual, without license or knowledge by the State and without infringement.
1st amendment
The 19th Amendment
10th amendment
the 9th amendment
protects the voting rights of women of any shape or size
bill of rights
First amendment
There is no such amendment as of 2013.
Women
the 19th amendment protects to voting of women
Grants citizenship and protects the rights of African Americans.
The Fifth, Sixth, and Eighth Amendments