Privacy law in the United States rests primarily on several constitutional provisions and a long line of court decisions. This article explains which amendments courts actually rely on, why the Ninth Amendment is rarely used as an independent basis for new rights, and what options...
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March 11, 2026
This article explains what the Ninth Amendment says and how it is used in privacy disputes. It aims to give voters and civically engaged readers clear, sourceable context about a constitutional provision often invoked in debates over personal liberty. Michael Carbonara’s campaign materials focus on...
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March 11, 2026
The Ninth Amendment is a short but often-cited line in the Bill of Rights. Its text says that listing certain rights should not be taken to deny other rights retained by the people, a point that shapes how scholars and courts think about unenumerated protections....
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March 11, 2026
This explainer answers the simple question: Can the U.S. Constitution be changed? It summarizes the constitutional authority, the formal routes for proposing and ratifying amendments, and why changes typically require broad support across the states. The piece relies on primary sources such as the National...
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March 11, 2026