Today is Bill of Rights Day in the United States. The first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution are known as the Bill of Rights. Those amendments were ratified on December 15, 1791, when nine of the 13 states in the union at that time voted for their adoption.
The U.S. Constitution is a living, breathing document. Even when it was written, many people knew it was inadequate for the new nation because it gave the national government too much power and gave individual citizens and states too little power.
In fact, the U.S. Constitution itself was not ratified (adopted by three-fourths of the states) until there were assurances that amendments were going to follow. The process, though, was not as simple as one might imagine.
For Americans in 2025, the first ten amendments to the Constitution are taken for granted. They make sense to us. They appear to us as a neat little package we easily call the Bill of Rights; however, did you know that when the first Congress of the United States convened on March 4, 1789, they considered 145 proposed amendments?
I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall in their meetings in New York City over the next six and a half months to hear the debates! Can you imagine?
On September 25, 1789, the Congress submitted 12 of those 145 amendments to the states for consideration. Ten of the 12 were approved by the required nine states over the next 27 months and the Bill of Rights became the law of the land on December 15, 1791.
I tried in vain to find a list of those 145 proposed amendments online this weekend. It would be interesting to know what they were about and why only 12 of them were submitted to the states for consideration.
Even without knowing what the other 133 proposed amendments addresses, I can safely say that our lives have been much simpler since 1791 with a ten-amendment Bill of Rights instead of a 145-amendment Bill of Rights!
The Bill of Rights, condensed version
The First Amendment guarantees us freedom of religion, speech, and the press.
The Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms.
The Third Amendment guarantees that in a time of peace, no citizen will be required to house a soldier without their consent, nor during a time of war except as prescribed by the law.
The Fourth Amendment guarantees us to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures. (Unfortunately, I do not believe ICE and the U.S. Border Patrol are currently being held to that.)
The Fifth Amendment is more complex than the first four. It addresses the protection of our rights to life, liberty, and property. It talks about indictments, military actions, double jeopardy, not having to testify against yourself, due process of law, and the taking of private property for public use without just compensation. (The “due process of law” clause has been ignored in some cases this year by the Trump Administration. We have not heard the last of this.)
The Sixth Amendment guarantees us a speedy public trial by an impartial jury in the jurisdiction in which the alleged crime was committed when we are accused of a crime. It also addresses the right to obtain witnesses and assistance of legal counsel for our defense.
The Seventh Amendment addresses our rights in civil cases.
The Eighth Amendment protects us from excessive bail, fines, and “cruel and unusual” punishment.
The Ninth Amendment protects us from being denied our rights or disparaged by the rights that other people have. Just because a right is not listed in the U.S. Constitution, it does not mean that we do not have that right or those rights. Just because a right is not mentioned in the Constitution, the government cannot infringe upon it.
The Tenth Amendment states that powers that are not specifically delegated to the federal government by the Constitution are, therefore, rights of the states or of the people.
Just for fun, when did the Eleventh Amendment come along?
Thinking about the Bill of Rights today, I was curious to find out how long after December 15, 1791, was the Eleventh Amendment ratified and what is it about? We never hear anything about it.
In 1793, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Chisholm v. Georgia that individuals from one state could sue the government of another state. The Eleventh Amendment was ratified in 1795. It protects states from being sued by individuals from another state or country. It established the principle of state sovereign immunity.
How many amendments have been proposed since 1787?
Since the U.S. Constitution was written in 1787, approximately 11,985 amendments have been introduced in Congress. Most of them never made it off the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives or the floor of the Senate. Twenty-seven amendments to the Constitution have been ratified.
Janet
P.S. On Friday, the National Trust for Historic Preservation filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to try to stop the construction of President Antionette’s 90,000-square-foot dance hall at the White House. The suit argues that President Antionette did not go through the legal review process for the project.
The courts have not been able to stop him on anything else, so it will be interesting to see where this case goes. I suppose if it goes all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court his buddies who form the majority of the court will vote for Trump to proceed with his little dance hall. Or, if they vote to stop him, he will just ignore their ruling. After all, he has already demolished the East Wing of the White House to make room for it.
“Let them eat cake.” Or, as he proclaimed last week with the Christmas season fast approaching, a child only needs one pencil.
J.


A most interesting post with a lot of important information. I was surprised by the amount of amendments that had been proposed… And the horrors of a president and his government ignoring the fundamental rights that had guaranteed freedom and prosperity to all in the US… Today, more important than ever, all US citizens and residents need to know and even carry the Constitution in their pockets to show to the delinquents of ICE (A criminal organisation) what liberty is all about in a nation of laws. All the best Janet, and greetings from a cold and rainy Mediterranean coast! The sun here has been “on strike” for four days already…
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Very timely, Janet.
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Re Trump et al.: second verse, same as the first, a little bit louder and a little bit worse.
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Thank you, Francis. I had no idea there had been so many amendments proposed until I was doing the research for this blog post. I want to find a list of the 145 amendments the Congress in 1789 had to sort through! I like your idea that we should all carry a copy of the Constitution. It would be wonderful if our dear leader and his staff would take time to read it sometime. Dear leader sank to a new low in what he said on Truth Social about the murders of Rob Reiner and his wife. Some Republicans even criticized him for what he said. That’s how horrible it was! Every day he sinks lower. Very cold and crisp here today. Coldest morning in several years but sunny. Sorry you’re socked in with rain!
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Thank you, Pat. I thought so, too.
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Yes. He hit a new low with what he said on Truth Social about Rob Reiner’s murder.
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Yes, there isn’t a puddle of water that he doesn’t splash through, it seems. And there seems to be nothing too low for him… It is still raining here, seems a slow moving storm that came across from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean… Anyways it is a beautiful day because it is a gift from God. All the best to you Janet!
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Lots of fine research, Janet. I am appalled that the only Bill of Rights that seem to excite fervor with some are their Second Amendment rights, followed by their personal interpretation of what freedom of religion means (my interpretation of conservative Christianity, but not yours).
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I’ll admit that I was actually shocked.
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Great post, Janet. I’m planning to read The Federalist Papers next year, which discuss much of what happened in New York. Reading about how this country was created and the Constitution is fascinating, especially after reading the biography of John Adams. I’m also planning to read The Creation of the American Republic by Gordon Wood and a biography of Thomas Jefferson. With all the confusion in this country and all the talk about the Founding Fathers, I’m determined to learn everything I can about that period of time.
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Nice analogy! You always seem to find the silver lining, even in a string a rainy days.
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Thank you, Pat. Yes, it’s surprising this President and this Congress haven’t outlawed all but the 2nd Amendment. And they are only in favor of freedom of religion if it’s their warped version of the one they claim to adhere to. It would be interesting to give the Pres and Congress members a quiz. The only question: how many amendments are in the Bill of Rights? Wonder how many could even make an educated guess.
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I was, too, Liz. Then, I was shocked that I was shocked. I didn’t know it was humanly possible to be so callous in light of another person’s suffering or tragedy. Then, he just doubled down when a reporter asked him about the comment. Who knew it was possible for a person to be devoid of empathy?
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That’s my favorite period in history to study. Your reading list for 2026 is quite impressive. I’m kicking myself for not keeping the political theory textbook I had in undergraduate school. It included many of the writings of Thomas Paine and others. A re-read of it would be time well spent. It is such a shame that we have such a pitiful President for our country’s 250th birthday. It’s tragic.
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Thank you! And still raining non stop!
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I don’t consider him human. He’s a monster.
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Oh no! That’s too much rain!
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You’re right. He shows no signs of being human.
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This morning we saw the sun and blue skies! Things are back to normal, thank God!
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That will lift everyone’s spirits! There’s nothing like a sunny day after a string of dreary weather! Enjoy the rest of your beautiful day!
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Thank you Janet! All the best!
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