The Eight Amendment also requires that the punishment be graduated and proportioned to the offense. It forbids grossly disproportionate sentences (Rhodes, 2015). The U.S. Supreme Court reversed the Alabama Supreme Court’s decision and remanded. The Court held that the Eight Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment forbids a mandatory sentence of life in prison without parole for juvenile homicide offenders.…
The thirteenth amendment to the United States Constitution changed our nation in a radical way. During the previous years, a path was carved to make way for a movement that would abolish slavery and change the United States’ culture. This amendment is a crucial and intriguing part of the Constitution, in fact- its original purpose was not to abolish slavery. The thirteenth amendment that was first passed in February of 1861 was to ensure that slavery would remain legal in the states.…
"“Where slavery and involuntary servitude is abolished, with the exception as punishment for a crime. That is the 13th amendment, the movie 13th was published in 2016 which elaborates on enslavement and our justice system. 13th was directed by Ava Duvernay showing Americans how the 13th amendment is abused by our justice system.“Where Duvernay is an African American woman who directed 13th which showed a lot of political interviews and interviews with people that have experienced the corrupt justice system. Henry Louis Gates Jr. was the first African American to get a doctorate degree Henry is a Black Lives Matter supporter and was interviewed in 13th. This can create some controversy because in his past he had some trouble with the police, making him biased on the questions he is asked in 13th.…
As a United States citizen, the Constitution affords the citizens certain absolute liberties. One of those liberties is housed within the most referenced amendment; the 14th amendment. The 14th amendment; ratified in 1868, Section 1 states in part: …nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor to deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. Within this amendment lays the foundation for the citizens of the United States to be able to sell their own human organs for profit.…
In 1789, James Madison creator and supporter of the 8th amendment and later ratified in 1791 states that excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishment inflicted. A supporter of the 8th amendment and chief recorder of information for Virginia. The founding fathers also supported the 8th amendment. A supporter of the 8th amendment, Goerge Mason, he included the three provisions for the 8th amendment. For example, a person who steals from a convenience store cannot be put in jail and have bond set for one million dollars because the 8th amendment states that no excessive fines imposed.…
Technology has changed a lot over the years, but has it changed for the better? Many people think it has not. All over the world, people are on their cellular devices. Little do they know that the government can see everything they do and search on their phone. Therefore, I propose a 28th Amendment to the United States Constitution stating that Technology privacy will now be issued among everyone and the government will no longer have access to anyone's history.…
"Cruel and unusual" to refer only to certain barbarous methods of punishment. ”(Harvard Law Review). The 8th amendment was first written 1791. It was an amendment that had the power of eliminating all punishments that were labeled as barbarous or inhuman. Abolished punishments included the whipping post, public execution, and more.…
The Gettysburg Address and the 13th Amendment Essay Nobody wants a meaningless death. Nobody wants a wasted life that could have meant more. The large scale that war presents terrible loss inevitably gives rise to the comparison of the outcome to the sacrifices made to achieve it.…
Vermont, Maine, and Mississippi (depending on the crime) are the only three states out of fifty that allow voting while in jail, for all other states the voting right is removed while serving time in jail, prison, on parole or probation. For all 50 states, the right to vote is restored after serving the correct time or term. Some conditions apply for certain states, but it is still possible to retain the right to vote. The major of the states have the law, which is you lose the right to vote while serving your term and retain it afterwards, but other states have different laws. I believe that the right to vote should be revoked while serving your time, but retained after you’ve served your term.…
The U.S. Constitution’s clause regarding “cruel and unusual punishment” is the most essential and contentious part of the Eighth Amendment. What does it mean for a punishment of a crime to be “cruel and unusual”? How does one evaluate a punishment’s cruelty? The Eighth Amendment, ratified in 1791, includes only sixteen words: "Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted” (Eighth Amendment).…
The Eighth Amendment, which forbids unnecessary fines and bails as well as cruel and unusual punishment, was included in the Constitution because the British’s ways of punishment angered the Founding Fathers of the constitution and they wanted to be sure that the government’s power would not be abused and to prevent any future problems arising in areas of justice. The framers of the constitution, when writing the Eighth Amendment, took into consideration cases where severe punishments such as, branding, strangling or burning would be used. According to Exploring Constitutional Conflicts, “One clue to the expectations of the framers comes from the debates of the First Congress that proposed the Eighth Amendment. On the floor of the House, Representative Livermore complained about the vagueness of the amendment's language: "It is sometimes necessary to hang a man, villains often deserve a whipping, and perhaps having their ears cut off, but are we in the future to be prevented from inflicting those punishments because they are 'cruel'?” .…
The twenty six amendment say that the right of citizens of the United States, who are 18 of age or older, to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the united states or by any state an account of age . This amendment is Important because it gave 18 year olds and people older than 18 the right to vote because if they didn’t have the right there wouldn’t be enough people to vote in elections and other voting rights that would affect the way we live today. This amendment was made in 1971 by President Richard M. Nixon the states ratified that amendment in July of that year. This amendment is still affecting the way we live today because without it the way we live would be different.…
After the constitution was added in 1787 by the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, many claimed that the constitution did not efficiently defend the basic natural rights of the citizens. The anti-federalist and federalist had an argument whether or not the Bill of Rights should be added. The anti-federalist believed that without the Bill of Rights, the government would overpower and abuse the people. In the end, the anti-federalist won, and thus the Ninth Amendment was born. In essence, the Ninth Amendment is read like this: “The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people” (Revolutionary War and Beyond).…
Abstract In the modern times back in the late 18th century in the Constitution where the Founding Fathers were established the to rebuild the federal government to become more efficient than the recent government under the Article of Confederation, they were also published and ratified the ten natural rights of the citizens known as the Bill of Rights. In the Bill of Rights of the Congress, the Second Amendment, which infers that the people of the society has been entitled to have possessions of bearing weapons; although, in the modern society of today, where the amendment has become the most controversial of the Bill of Rights,as the critics came to a solution by preventing the people of the world of having…
“Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted “ (US). This is what the Eighth Amendment states. Although excessive bail and fines are intriguing, what’s more striking about the Eighth Amendment is that it mentions “cruel and unusual punishments”. Although you would think “cruel and unusual punishments” might be rare I think you’d be surprised how many cases deal strictly with what the Eighth Amendment prohibits.…