According to the U.S. Constitution, states' rights come naturally from the rights of the citizens in the states, who get their rights from God. The Constitution only guarantees those rights of the states and individuals that already exist. (This is how the Constitution puts it, not a modern political statement.) The only rights that the Constitution creates are rights of the Federal (U.S.) government.Another way to make this point is that whatever responsibilities are not covered by the US Constitution are left to the States, which is exactly what the 10th Amendment says.
The three categories that make up freedom are political rights, civil rights, and economic freedom.
the three natural rights are Life Liberty and Property :)
the facts that politics were towards the left and providing civil rights
make rights contained in the bill of rights applicable to the states.
Two wrongs don't make a right...but 3 rights make a left!
It should make a left. If you go right twice, you are going the opposite direction, so another right would be left of where you started.
No. Two rights make you face the opposite direction you are facing. So you don't go left or right.
Yes.
make three rights to make a left. haha.
3, mY DEAR WATTSON. Answer While a wrong cannot make a right, the number of lefts that make a right is equal to the number of rights that make a left.
Three lefts make a right. Three rights make a left. (Two Wrights make an airplane.)
to wrongs don't make it right; but three rights make a left turn! -nyesh;&
Think of a compass rose, where you're facing north. Turn right 3 times, so you're facing the west, which is the left. Or, if you start in a neutral position, and consider each turn to be worth rotating 180o, then turning right 3 times would be facing right and then rotating (clockwise or counter-clockwise) 360o 3 times would end up pointing you to your left.
Yup
If you turn right three times, you will be facing the direction that was originally to your left. I'm not really sure what this has to do with the first part of your question, though.
Nope.