by Chap Petersen

As a lawyer, I both teach Constitutional Law and argue matters which arise under the U.S. Constitution.
These cases involve phrases like “right to free speech,” “free exercise of religion,” “due process” and “equal protection under the law.”
The above quotes are in our U.S. Constitution — but where do those rights actually come from?
At a public hearing on Wednesday, September 3, Senator Kaine of Virginia criticized a Trump appointee for stating such American rights were God-given.
Citing a divine source for American rights was “deeply troubling,” he said, the kind of kooky thinking associated with theocratic regimes, such as Iran.
Instead, these freedoms come from “our governments.”
Senator Kaine’s opinions are not unusual in today’s secular age. Claiming that rights come from God is archaic and anti-progressive.
But that’s exactly what the Founding Fathers believed. Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence states it best:
“We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.”
The Second Inaugural Address of Abraham Lincoln also cited divine right in explaining the American Civil War:
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