Explain The Three Unalienable Rights In The Declaration Of Independence

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The Declaration of Independence states three unalienable rights and those are the only three rights that should be stated in it. Many will disagree with that opinion but this paper will soon prove why the three unalienable rights stated in the constitution are the only rights that should be stated. The three main points as to why those three rights are the only rights that should be stated are 1) They only needed to state three rights so as to show why they were a free country. 2) Although The Declaration of Independence is missing some important rights James Madison made sure to create the Bill of Rights to insure the government could not control the rights. 3) Lastly, the Declaration of Independence was not created to list out all the rights Americans had it was instead created to tell foreign nations as to why the colonies had separated themselves from Great Britain’s rule. The first reason the Declaration of Independence does not need more rights in it, is because they only put three rights in there for a reason. The reason they only put three rights in the Declaration of Independence, is because they only needed to use three rights to explain what a free country has and how America had those same rights. If they had to use more rights to prove they were a free country they would have used them. Another reason they don’t need more rights, is …show more content…

Madison created the Bill of Rights, because he believed that there were certain rights given to us by God, and that the government should not have control over. He then crated the Bill of Rights, to ensure that the government would not take these rights away. The Bill of Rights was also created to answer all the complaints of the Declaration of Independence not having more rights