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No. Nowhere in the constitution is "freedom of rights" mentioned
No freedoms are limited by the constitution. That is why there is a Bill of Rights.
FREEDOM!
There is no guarantee of freedom of access to information in the Constitution.
The goal of the First Amendment of the US Constitution is to guarantee freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom to peacefully assemble, freedom of religion and the freedom to seek redress of issues of importance.
The US Constitution guarantees and recognizes the rights Americans already have. Based on is doctrinal foundations, the US Constitution guarantees the right to vote and not to pass laws that interfere with the practice of religion as one simple example. The main purpose of this governing document is to specify what the duties of the Federal government has. What powers are not granted to the Federal government, belong to the States that compose the Union.In the United States, the US Constitution does not "give rights". The US Constitution acknowledges the civil rights that citizens already have. The US Constitution delineates the powers of the Federal government and its constraints.All other powers not delegated to the Federal government are left to the States to determine. No laws or policies however, can cancel the rights of citizens that the US Constitution recognizes as rights citizens already have.
Yes and no, it depends in what state you live. For example if you live in states like New York, you don't have a 2nd and 4th amendment. But in freedom loving states for example Texas, Louisiana and Arizona you are guaranteed all the rights that the constitution guarantees.
The first amendment of the Constitution guarantees the freedom of Press, Assembly, and Speech. :)
free BBC's :)
The US Constitution.
The US Constitution - 1987 Freedom of Expression 1-4 was released on: USA: 1987
The first amendment of the US Constitution guarantees free speech. The first amendment is one of ten amendments within the US Constitution called the Bill of Rights. These ten were part of the original constitution. More amendments were later added.