<span>This clause affirms that any privileges and immunities found in one state are transferable to another state, and that citizens do not have to worry about losing those privileges by traveling across state lines. This gives a sense of equality when it concerns rights and privileges, instead of having a potpourri of laws that might not be enforceable from state-to-state.</span>
D ireland, Germany and sweden
The complaint about <u>quartering troops</u> refers to the British government requiring that colonists allow British soldiers to stay in their homes and requiring the colonists to provide food for them.
Quartering of soldiers meant soldiers would have the right to enter your home and expect you to provide them food and lodging. That was seen by the colonists as invasive of their personal rights.
The issue of quartering of soldiers appeared not only as a complaint in the Declaration of Independence, but also became a featured right in the Bill of Rights of the Constitution. The 3rd Amendment states: <em>"No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law."</em>
Court justices have used the 3rd Amendment statement about the quartering of soldiers to show that the constitution does give attention to citizen's right to privacy, even if not using the exact term "right to privacy."
The US supported South Korea which has a democratic government similar to the US while the Soviet Union supported North Korea, which has a communist government similar to the one the USSR had.