The 21st Amendment repealed the 18th Amendment.
Amendments can not be changed or repealed by any one person or a group of persons. The only way an amendment can be appealed is by another amendment added to the constitution that changes and/or repeals the amendment that the people or government want changed.
The 18th amendment.
The 21st amendment, which is the repeal of prohibition, repealed the 18th amendment which was about prohibition.
The only way to repeal an amendment to the U. S. Constitution is with another duly ratified amendment.
You are probably referring to the 21st Amendment, which ended Prohibition. The 18th amendment to the Constitution (1919) made it illegal to manufacture, sell or distribute alcoholic beverages. It was supposed to reduce alcoholism and lower crime rates (many crimes were related to drunkenness), but it turned out to be a very unpopular law, as well as a law that was nearly impossible to enforce. By 1933, the 21st Amendment had repealed it.
John Bingham referenced gender in the U.S. Constitution for the first time when writing the Fourteenth Amendment. The amendment is worded to specifically address the rights of males.
It is commonly known as part of the Bill of Rights, or more specifically, the right to bear arms, but its only official name is Amendment II.
It can only be changed by passing another constitutional amendment. The best example of this is the 18th amendment, which was later overturned by passage of the 21st amendment. (These amendments related to prohibition and then the repeal thereof.)
Yes, but only by passing another constitutional amendment.
You create another amendment repealing one of the previous. :)
The 18th amendment to the US Constitution instituted prohibition of alcohol sales and production in January 1919. In December of 1933 the 21st amendment cancelled the 18th amendment by stipulating that individual states should regulate alcohol.
An amendment can only be repealed with a new amendment replacing it.