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Your 1st & 2nd Amendment Constitutional Rights
Rating: 4.8 out of 5(8 ratings)
693 students

Your 1st & 2nd Amendment Constitutional Rights

The United States Constitution
Last updated 12/2025
English

What you'll learn

  • Students will learn about Constitilonal Concepts
  • Students will learn about The seven Articles of Incorporation
  • Students will learn about the US Bill of Rights
  • Students will learn about the Pre-Civel War Amendments, 11 and 12
  • Students will learn about the Reconstruction Amendments, 13 through 15
  • Students will learn about the Twentieth Century Amendments, 16 through 27
  • Students will learn about Constitutional Doctrines that define American principals of law
  • Students will learn about various influetial constitutional cases that have helped define who we are as a nation

Course content

6 sections6 lectures2h 28m total length
  • Chapter 1. The First Amendment57:08

    Students will learn about some of the basic requirements and obligations of the U.S. Constitution and how it protects the people from an overzealous government.

Requirements

  • There are no prerequisites required. This series of essays are delivered in a neutral POV, the intent is to explain basic constitutional principles as you would learn them in law school.

Description

In the United States, we are a democracy governed by a constitution that establishes citizens' rights and limits the potential for governmental overreach. The key to Democracy is sunlight and more people understanding their constitutional rights, as to who is protected and what rights are supposed to be protected. Enlightenment provides the mind's nontangible power to influence others with facts rather than just passing on fear, as fear is the primary weapon of autocrats and dictators. This publication was developed to teach, change, or reinforce views of how the Constitution is designed to protect the rights of the people against an overzealous government. Hopefully, changed minds through intelligent dialogue may translate into changed votes as people learn to vote in their own best interests and recognize misinformation and hostile dialogue that divide workers and families, with no virtuous benefits bestowed on either side of the political spectrum. The Second Amendment was ratified in 1791 as part of the Bill of Rights. It was made enforceable by the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause and later against the states through selective incorporation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Until the late Twentieth century, the Second Amendment was about as popular as the Third Amendment (prohibition against billeting of soldiers), and was not necessarily a topical issue. The gun rights lobbies, including the National Rifle Association, however, used PR campaigns to make the Second Amendment a hot topic, accusing liberals of wanting to take everyone's guns away. Provisions, such as the Second Amendment, along with the rest of the Bill of Rights (the first ten amendments), are key to understanding the fundamentals of the United States' Constitutional rights. This series of essays, drawn from Wikipedia, provides a succinct two-hour review of the amendment's history, syntax, phrasing, and case law, as well as interpretations by the U.S. Circuit Courts, and how the understanding of the Second Amendment has evolved since the 2008 decision handed down in District of Columbia v. Heller.

Who this course is for:

  • Interested learners would include people interested in politics and want to understand the history and evolving foundation of the United States.
  • This course is for those managers who want to introduce new ideas and need to understand thoroughly the potential profitability, how and why it's going to be workable, and the basic elements of how ambidextrous teams working on opposing projects can improve the bottom line.