that is always our law
they are unalienable rights!
amendemnts
unalienable rights
The word used, as an example, in the Declaration of Independence is: Unalienable.
All men have rights that cannot be taken away
"Inalienable" means that these rights - to life, to liberty, and such - cannot be taken from you, or even be voluntarily surrendered. You have a right to life. You cannot give up your right to life even if you wanted to. If you sold your right to life to someone else and he killed you, it would still be murder - because you can't give up that right, and he can't buy it from you.
In 2006 by president Bush
Inalienable
A right is something you have with no questions asked, and it cannot be taken away. A privilege is something you earn, and upon misuse can be taken away.
Minority rights are rights of minorities that cannot be taken away by a vote of the majority.
"Unalienable rights" are rights that all men are enitled to, that cannot be taken away or given away. (note: governments and societies can and do remove these rights for violations of law)
The U.S. Constitution gives American men three rights that cannot be taken away. That is the right to liberty, justice, and pursuit of happiness.
no.. you can not everyone has a right to chose whichever type of people you like therefore you cannot get your child tooken away for being gay.
Limited government guarantees that a person's basic freedoms cannot be taken away.
An imborgatant
Yes
In the context of The Declaration of Independence, it refers to those rights that all human beings are assumed to possess and that the government cannot take away, such as life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
We could describe them as provisional; you can give someone shares but reserve the right to take them away again. Whereas, vested shares belong to someone fully, and cannot be taken away.
these are our rights which cannot be taken away