unalienable rights
Bill of Rights. Your human rights. Your rights that cannot be taken away.
The Declaration of Independence.
It should be self-evident from historical examples that the answer is yes. If you disagree, talk to any European Jew over 65. The US Constitution explicitly grants certain rights to the people, which cannot be taken away by an ordinary law. However, even these could be taken away by a constitutional amendment.
In the context of The Declaration of Independence, it refers to those rights that all human beings are assumed to possess and that the government cannot take away, such as life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
That all men are born with rights that cannot be taken away by the government
No, unalienable rights are inherent and cannot be taken away from individuals.
The word used, as an example, in the Declaration of Independence is: Unalienable.
Bill of Rights. Your human rights. Your rights that cannot be taken away.
The idea that the government does not have complete power; there are certain rights the government cannot take away from the people is called LIMITED GOVERNMNET.Tcarver6 Answered!!!
inalienable (cannot be transferred to another or others) or unalienable rights (Not to be separated, given away, or taken away; inalienable)
unalienable rights
It means rights that cannot be taken away.
these are our rights which cannot be taken away
All men have rights that cannot be taken away
Minority rights are rights of minorities that cannot be taken away by a vote of the majority.
that is always our law
"Unalienable rights" are rights that all men are enitled to, that cannot be taken away or given away. (note: governments and societies can and do remove these rights for violations of law)