We the People
Our Constitutional Rights
by
Book Details
About the Book
What would you think if you could be thrown in jail for speaking against the government or printing material to which officials objected? If you could be kept in prison until you told your jailers everything that they wanted to know? If people could come into your home at any time and ransack it to their heart's content? If at your trial you weren't allowed to have a lawyer or subpoena witnesses in your defense? Not so long ago, that's the way that it was, and it could be that way again.
We the People is about our rights, what they are, and how they got that way. Succinct and in narrative style, We the People addresses its subject at a popular level. Concentration is on three fundamental rights-freedom of expression, the right to privacy, and the principle of fair notice and fair hearing during apprehension and trial.
About the Author
Tom Gildersleeve has written several books published by such houses as Rentice-Hall and Wiley. He is retired, and for the past two years, his hobby has been the study of our Constitutional rights. He lives in Norwalk, Connecticut.