The right to privacy
According to the judicial branch, yes. The word "privacy" is not in the Constitution. The concept was developed by the Supreme Court based on its interpretation of several amendments, most notably the Fourth Amendment's protection against "unreasonable searches and seizures".
What year was the constitution ratified?
1787
The first 10 amendments are called this (extra 200pts: what year where they ratified?)
The Bill of Rights
A Jury of our peers
Nope. A "jury of your peers": While the Sixth Amendment guarantees an "impartial jury," it does not include the phrase "jury of your peers." The term is an informal legal concept, not a constitutional right.
What is the 1st amendment?
People have freedom of religion, speech, press, assembly and the right to petition the Government.
the presumption of innocence
Nope. The idea of being "innocent until proven guilty" is a foundational principle in American justice derived from English common law, not from the text of the Constitution itself.
What did the 13th amendment do?
Made slavery illegal in the United States.
What Amendment gave women the right to vote? (Extra 300pts: What year was it added to the constitution?)
19th; 1920
The right to vote
Now we do. The original Constitution did not grant or define a right to vote for citizens. Instead, it left the power to set voting qualifications to the states. The right was expanded through a series of later amendments, including the 15th (racial equality), 19th (women's suffrage), and 24th (banning poll taxes).
List 3 U.S. territories in which Citizens do not have federal voting representation
District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, Marshal Islands, American Samoa, Marshal Islands, & Guam.