to ensure individual liberties
The founding fathers
There was no single founder of the Bill of Rights. But the founders were known as the founding fathers.
they were afraid that they were gonna get their butts beat
The foundation was the Bible. Sarah114
To A Bill of Rights would be established.
James Madison wrote the Bill of Rights. He authored twelve amendments, however, only ten were agreed upon. The term for the delegates involved with creating the US Constitution are normally called the Framers, however, many of them were also involved in the war for independence, so with that in mind, the two sets of people can be called founding fathers as well as framers.
The founding fathers transformed America from a British colony to an independent nation. They created a constitution which remains the legal framework upon which America is based, to this day.
The founding fathers didn't really insist on a bill of rights, the antifederalists did. Federalists were people who wanted a strong government, but antifederalists were afraid that if there was a very strong government, the states would be too weak, and that people would lose rights if the government was too powerful. So when the federalists wanted to approve the Constitution, antifederalists said they wouldn't, until the federalists put in a Bill of Rights. So the federalists added the bill of rights, so that the anti-feds would ratify the constitution.
Yes, he has been invited one of them is when the bill of rights was made he was also a founding fathers
The Bill of Rights was written by people who were among the founding fathers. James Madison was the original author of the US Bill of Rights, basing much of what he wrote on the Virginia Bill of Rights authored by George Mason.
It meant more red tape when it comes to creating new laws, and it meant that citizens had to be handled delicately with white gloves.
The founding fathers thought search warrants were important because King George's men could enter a house and conduct a search at will and States didn't want the new Federal Government to be allowed to do it without approval of a judge.