Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Difference in human rights between the US and a foreign country?

Also, an online news story that can help?
Answers:
The U.S. Constitution states that there are certain inalienable rights, or as you call them - "human rights", that are rights that the government can't give you or take away. They are your rights as a human being.

The www.state.gov website will you tell you all the human rights reports done in other countries. I just randomly picked Japan and Switzerland.
free speech, the right to a trial by a jury of you peers, no torture, no forced labor, the right to vote, freedom of religion, are a few of our rights in the u.s. and the difference is that in some countries you don't have these rights.
Well, right now, I don't see much of a difference between either--depending on how you look at it.

We torture, they torture. We're just one big happy family.

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