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galina1969 [7]
1 year ago
10

Read this passage from the English Bill of Rights.

Law
1 answer:
avanturin [10]1 year ago
4 0

This passage of the English Bill of Rights led to the protection of the right to freedom of speech.

<h3 /><h3>What was the English Bill of Rights?</h3>

It corresponds to the set of laws signed in 1689 in England by the rulers William III and Maria ll. This document implemented a set of civil rights for citizens, leading to the strengthening of parliament.

Therefore, the right to freedom of speech allowed greater freedom for citizens to express their thoughts and ideas for social development.

Find out more about Bill of Rights here:

brainly.com/question/2018522

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Our naturalization ceremonies provide an opportunity for the public to see and participate in civic life.  Over the last several years, we have taken ceremonies out of the federal courthouse and held them at a variety of locations throughout northwest Ohio, including outdoors at the Civic Center Mall, Fifth Third Field, and Sauder Village.  We have also visited numerous libraries, colleges, universities, high schools and elementary schools.  At schools, students often have a part in the ceremony, reading The New Colossus, playing in the band, singing in the choir, and giving short speeches about their own families and immigration experiences.  The ceremony itself is a lesson in geography and languages.  It is our hope that by participating in these ceremonies, our students come to understand and appreciate their birthright as deeply as our new citizens.

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As a judge, I encounter a direct consequence of this lack of understanding in the form of jury avoidance.  When I read the flimsy excuses given by some notified of jury service, I cringe.  That is why, at the beginning of a trial, I give a short history lesson and explain why jury trials are one of our great civic responsibilities.  After years of widespread abuse by courts stacked with King George’s cronies, our Founders established the right to a jury trial.  The colonists wanted to ensure that members of their community would be responsible for safeguarding their liberty and rights.  Indeed, juries were so important to our country’s founding that King George’s attempt to deprive the colonies of a trial by jury was listed as an abuse of power in the Declaration of Independence.  The right to a jury trial was also codified in our Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Amendments to the Constitution.  As John Adams wrote, “representative government and trial by jury are the heart and lungs of liberty.  Without them we have no fortification against being ridden like horses, fleeced like sheep, worked like cattle, and fed and clothed like swine and hogs.”

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