Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution

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    for two terms and served eight years as secretary of state. He is often referred to as the Father of the Constitution because he played a pivotal role with the ratification process of the Constitution. (Can also talk about what helped ratify constitution) James Madison, John Jay, and Alexander Hamilton were the authors of the Federalist Papers. The Federalist Papers were a series of eighty-five essays that urged citizens to ratify the Constitution. The Federalist Papers appeared in the New York…

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    The Prohibition Era Essay

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    changed history for women in the United States. Prohibition was a period starting in the 1920’s and lasted all the way through 1933. Prohibition led to the eighteenth amendment which was upheld on January 16, 1919, which forebode the transporting, manufacturing, and merchandising of alcoholic beverages. This amendment was in action for fourteen years before the ratification of the twenty-first amendment. The twenty-first amendment, which overturned the eighteenth amendment was the first and only…

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    The Bill of Rights are the first 10 Amendments of the Constitution. It was created to exclude governmental power over citizen’s rights. The Bill of Rights is a protection for an individual’s liberty. For example, the amendment’s guarantee a person’s freedom of speech, religion, and press; arranges rules for due process of law; reserves all power not substituted to the Federal Government, to the people or the states; etc. But imagine the government no longer granted you those rights, stripping…

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    and Legislative Tactics The United States Congress was initiated in 1789 as a separate entity from the judicial and executive branches of government under America’s Constitution (Congress of the United States, 2014). Furthermore, it is comprised of two houses (the Senate and the House of Representatives), this division of houses is known as bicameralism and is a consequence of the Connecticut Compromise, which was an attempt to balance the voting advantages of states with large populations…

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    The U.S. Constitution is a document that embraces the fundamental laws and principles by which the United States is governed. The preamble is a statement attached to the Constitution, it states, “We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of the liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this constitution for…

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    The U.S. Constitution is heavily influenced by the Magna Carta. The Magna Carta is a document originally drafted on June 15, 1215 by the barons of King John of England who were fed up with him for various reasons. This stands as one of the first instances where “citizens” came together to change the injustice they were living under. The idea eventually spread to the North America by immigrants fleeing religious persecution in England. Once place where the Magna Carta and the sixth amendment of…

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    Article III of the Constitution of the United States established the need for a Supreme Court and also established the federal jurisdiction (History of the Federal Judiciary). The Judiciary Act of 1789 established the Supreme Court, Circuit Courts, and District Courts (History of the Federal Judiciary). As the United States got larger so did the amount of judges needed to sit for the ever-expanding court system. Eventually…

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    of the Bill of Rights Once independence had been declared, in 1776, the American states immediately began writing state constitutions and state bill of rights. In 1791, the Bill of Rights, containing 10 amendments, was ratified into the constitution. The purpose of these documents was to state the liberties that people had and that the government could not infringe on. James Madison wrote these amendments to prohibit specific government powers and protect the liberties of the Americans.…

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    is the Constitution which provides every one of us the freedoms which we enjoy today. Most people take these freedoms for granted, mainly due to the fact that they are not faced with a situation where these rights would protect them. Nevertheless, these rights remain available should they be needed. Examples of these rights include the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and due process, the Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable searches and seizures and the Sixth Amendment…

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    make an impact on your life hundreds of years after their dead. How you might ask. The philosophers and authors influenced not only their own people but other countries for example America; our rights and our freedoms come from documents like the Constitution or the Bill of Rights and those documents were written by the “Founding Fathers.” The “Founding…

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