Want this question answered?
The Miranda rights were not vetoed. They are in use today. They come from the amendments to the Constitution.
No, Miranda Cosgrove is still alive as of today.
Compromising is still important to leaders because know what to do with the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.
Yes! The Bill Of Rights is still important today because it defines the saying our American forefathers said and wanted "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"
The voting rights for the blacks is one of the most important reforms that are important in the US today. Constitutionalism is another reform in the US today.
no
Their laws are still used today.
they wanted equal rights and still trying to get them today
they are the outline of our government today.
Neither. It laid out the rights people have and is still in use today.
Groups still fighting for civil rights today are black people and women.
According to the Declaration of Independence, governments are formed in order to protect the "natural rights" of the people (in the D of I these were listed as "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"). This is still important to citizens of the United States today because the goal of a government should STILL be to protect those rights--not to enrich its members, or to gain international power, or to promote mercantile enterprises.