When someone fails to get naturalized (a way of becoming a citizen if immigrating here). You can lose them as an american if you leave and decide to. But we americans have unalienable rights that can't be taken away.
Unless of course you have been convicted of a felony. Inmates in the US have very few rights, and those are difficult to defend, or prove have been violated.
Well, that would be pretty much everybody. Black people were denied their civil rights, and some say they still are denied some rights. Gay people are currently denied their civil rights. Women also face discrimination.
The idea that gay and lesbian citizens should possess the same civil rights as other citizens is somehow controversial to some people. The idea that gays and lesbians should be afforded legal recognition of their relationships, including the usual benefits and responsibilities of legal marriage, is controversial to some people. The idea that a minority can be denied civil rights based on either somebody's religion or the fact that they have always been denied equal rights is controversial to some people.
Privacy, legally killed, voting, Denied in education
The Magna Carta gave the English people some of their own rights and is the basis of such documents as The English Bill of Rights, the American Bill of Rights, and the American Consitution.
The Constitution was created for the rights and some of the freedom for American people.
Here are some rights that were denied to Slaves,They could not vote.No Freedom of Speech.Their families could be broken up, if they did not work hard enough up too the asters ability.And they could not have a family.
Jim Crow Laws
It denied the right of some people
No because some people are not that *good* to get accepted.
in African American history what were some famous civil rights protest?
I'm pretty sure that it was because the Constitution lacked guaranteeing the people the rights which they lacked when part of England, the rights that they desired (Such as Freedom of Speech, etc.). So after the Constitution, they made some of the rights that they wanted to ensure that the American people could not be deprived of.
Assuming you are referring to their right to marry the person of their choice, yes. In some jurisdictions, same-sex couples are not permitted to marry. In some jurisdictions, they are. In other places, they can obtain the same rights and responsibilities as a married couple, but their relationship cannot legally be called a "marriage."