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The founding fathers
Yes, it was important to the Founding Fathers to justify their actions by evoking traditional English rights. As English colonists, they felt they were deprived of these rights when Parliament passed laws without representation from the colonies. The Founding Fathers also did not want to provoke a radical reconstruction.
The Founding Fathers said a very great deal about individual rights.
As members of the social elite, they did not want to provoke a radical revolution
A state which is governed by the rule of law.
Freedom
to ensure individual liberties
The Magna Carta was believed to set historic precedent by the Founding Fathers. In that case, the barons had confronted a despot and demanded their rights be recognized, recorded and agreed upon by King John. In the case of the Founding Fathers, they sought to confirm their rights before George III and Parliament.
I'm pretty sure it was the Magna Carta.
The founding fathers thought search warrants were important because King George's men could enter a house and conduct a search at will and States didn't want the new Federal Government to be allowed to do it without approval of a judge.
There was no single founder of the Bill of Rights. But the founders were known as the founding fathers.
yes and true