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That's half of the 2nd Amendment.
Congress shall not pass any law at applies to the people that does not apply to them.
That's half of the 2nd Amendment.
The Tenth Amendment doesn't mention the powers of Congress; those are discussed in the seven Articles (primarily Article I), the body of the original Constitution. The Tenth Amendment is about powers reserved to the States (or to the people).Amendment X"The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people."
I have no idea what the S's are. Virtually every article has some value-- even if it is inaccurate, it shows what people were printing at the time.
The 7th Amendment guarantees people the right to a jury trial in Federal Court in many cases of civil trials. This amendment also applies to cases in which the Federal Courts review the results of State courts. It guarantees that there will be at least 6 persons on the juries. This amendment is unusual in that it does not apply directly to State courts; however, most States abide by it, anyway.
If you mean by articles things written by people in that time there is very little. The printing press wasn't invented until 1446 and most people couldn't read or write. Monks did write, make and copy books. The Book of Kells is a good example of their work. Other than that there is nothing that survives.
The Seventeenth Amendment allowed U.S. Senators to be elected directly by the people.
The fifth amendment applies to all levels of government. It gives all people in America basic legal rights, such as not having to testify against oneself and not being imprisoned or having a home taken away without trial.
the 9th amendment
The Fourteenth Amendment o.O
The US Supreme Court has incorporated much of the Bill of Rights to the states via the Fourteenth Amendment. While this doesn't quite ensure states respect individuals' US Constitutional rights, it does give people a legal right to fight unconstitutional state laws and policies if or when they're enacted.