Militia.
Gun control has EVERYTHING to do with the 2nd amendment; it's why the amendment was written in the first place!!!!!
The Second Amendment.
it was in 1791
guns
The Second Amendment states the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
It was adopted in 1791
It's the 3nd amendment. The second is about the militia's right to bear arms. Amendment three is the one about quartering.
the year the second amendment was passed down was in 1941 and this is by chris
Gun control has EVERYTHING to do with the 2nd amendment; it's why the amendment was written in the first place!!!!!
The second Amendment.
"it means that american citizens have the right to own a weapon.!"... No it doesn't, that's the second amendment a brief summery of the third amendment is that Soldiers cannot be quartered in any home during a war without the owners consent.'
The Second Amendment - It protects people's right to have weapons.The Third Amendment - The government cannot make people house soldiers, which in other words means that the government cannot make soldiers go into peoples houses and stay for a while there without the owners permission.Fourth Amendment - It protects people against unfair searches of their homes.Fifth-Eighth Amendment - Due process of law is promised, which in other words means the right to be treated fairly and have a fighting chance when facing legal action.Ninth Amendment - people have rights aside from the ones listed in the Constitution.Tenth Amendment - the government can only do things listed in the Constitution.
The duration of In Search of the Second Amendment is 1.85 hours.
The Second Amendment
It took seven years for the second amendment to be ratified.
No, he did not. Jefferson did write a similar, shorter version for the Virginia Constitution in 1776, but James Madison included the right of citizens to bear arms in his list of 12 proposed amendments, ten of which were adopted as our Bills of Rights. Jefferson, who had no direct involvement in writing the Constitution, addressed the importance of a Bill of Rights, eventually convincing a reluctant Madison, and he repeatedly mentioned freedom of religion, freedom of the press, the right of habeas corpus, not keeping a standing army, and no monopolies, but he himself never mentioned the right to bear arms, as he evidently didn't consider it of great enough importance.
In Search of the Second Amendment was created on 2006-12-19.