right to silence and right of freedom
What are two rights only for United States citizens?
right to silence and right of freedom
citizens of individual states were also citizens of the united states
passport,law,respect
the US Constitution only pertains to states and citizens of the United States
There is a group of people who consider themselves to be sovereign citizens of the United States (rather than ordinary, garden variety citizens) and who claim to have special rights, however, the US government does not agree with them. Realistically, there is no such status as sovereign citizen; only nations are sovereign, citizens are not.
The Bill of Rights is not applied only to the federal government. The Bill of Rights is applied to all United States citizens and designed to express all freedoms the citizens rightfully possess.
Nothing. The voting rights provisions of the Constitution (in the 14th, 15th, 19th, 24th, and 26th Amendments) all expressly guarantee voting rights for "citizens of the United States." Noncitizens therefore have no voting rights under the Constitution.
Under the Articles of Confederation, only the national government could
The basic rights of all American citizens are the same, whether born or naturalized. However, only those citizens BORN in the United States may run for President.
Our founding fathers wanted the United States to allow citizens to practice whatever religion they chose. They did not want the United States government to establish only one religion. Our founding fathers wanted the citizens of the United States to have the freedom of religious choice, so placed this requirement in the Bill of Rights. That way, the United States government could not require citizens to practice Islam, Buddhism, or any other type of religion.
Our founding fathers wanted the United States to allow citizens to practice whatever religion they chose. They did not want the United States government to establish only one religion. Our founding fathers wanted the citizens of the United States to have the freedom of religious choice, so placed this requirement in the Bill of Rights. That way, the United States government could not require citizens to practice Islam, Buddhism, or any other type of religion.
citizens
You would only lose the rights you had in what ever states.