Want this question answered?
It provides a list of things that the Federal government is NOT allowed to do.
1) Human beings possess natural rights that cannot be legitimately given away or taken from by any government; 'unalienable rights'. These are rights ordained by the Creator. 2) Ordinary people create government to protect the above mentioned rights. 3) If the government fails to protect those unalienable/natural rights, the people themselves can withdraw their consent of that government and create a new one.
According to the Declaration of Independence, governments are established to secure the rights of mankind, such as the rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. These rights, according to the Declaration, are unalienable, meaning they cannot be taken away. When any form of government becomes "destructive of these ends" (the unalienable rights of the citizens), it is the right of the citizens to "alter or abolish" that government, and establish a new government that will protect the rights of the people.
He believed that all individuals are born with certain rights and privilages that should be protected.
people created government to protect our rights
It provides a list of things that the Federal government is NOT allowed to do.
Yes, it does, since the US rebelled partially because they believed that the British Parliament didn't protect those rights.
1) Human beings possess natural rights that cannot be legitimately given away or taken from by any government; 'unalienable rights'. These are rights ordained by the Creator. 2) Ordinary people create government to protect the above mentioned rights. 3) If the government fails to protect those unalienable/natural rights, the people themselves can withdraw their consent of that government and create a new one.
According to the Declaration of Independence, governments are established to secure the rights of mankind, such as the rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. These rights, according to the Declaration, are unalienable, meaning they cannot be taken away. When any form of government becomes "destructive of these ends" (the unalienable rights of the citizens), it is the right of the citizens to "alter or abolish" that government, and establish a new government that will protect the rights of the people.
He believed that all individuals are born with certain rights and privilages that should be protected.
According to the Declaration of Independence, people possess four unalienable rights: life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, and to change or abolish a destructive government and initiate a new government.
Natural rights, sometimes called unalienable rights, are rights the Framers believed all people are born with and can never give up. The Founders argued that the government's central purpose should be to protect and uphold these rights.
who believe that people had rights to remove a government that didnt protect their rights
We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal and endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights. Contrary to popular belief, the Constitution does not grant rights to the people but expressly prohibits the government from interfering in certain unalienable rights that can only be given (and thus can only be taken) by our Creator. Many of the other papers and communications of the founding fathers also supports these beliefs and the Constitution was actually written to limit the powers of the federal government and not to grant rights to we the people.
The Bill of Rights
people created government to protect our rights
unalienable rights