The Tenth Amendment defines how power is divided in the United States, reserving undelegated authority to the states or the people. As federal and state responsibilities evolve, the amendment remains central to debates over governance, rights, and constitutional structure.
Tag: Bill of Rights
Amendment IX — Rights That Remain Unwritten
The Ninth Amendment affirms that the rights listed in the Constitution do not limit the broader liberties retained by the people. Designed to prevent the narrowing of freedom, it recognizes that constitutional protections extend beyond what is written on the page and evolve as society changes.
Amendment VIII — When Punishment Becomes a Mirror
The Eighth Amendment protects against excessive fines, excessive bail, and “cruel and unusual punishments.” In a nation still debating what compassion means, the amendment remains one of the Constitution’s most important moral boundaries.
The Seventh Amendment: Justice by the People
Explore how the Humane Party’s ethical vision reimagines the Seventh Amendment—America’s forgotten promise of justice by the people.
The Sixth Amendment: The Voice of the Accused
Explore the Sixth Amendment through the Humane Party’s ethical lens—how the right to a fair trial, open court, and true justice remains the test of a nation’s conscience.
The Third Amendment: A Quiet Guardian of Liberty
In a year when soldiers patrol American streets, when police forces resemble armies, and when government agents hide their faces from the public they serve, this Amendment is no relic. It is a reminder.
The Second Amendment: From Militias to Modern Firearms
From Muskets to Militias When the Second Amendment was ratified in 1791, the United States was a fragile experiment in … More
