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The unalienable rights mentioned in the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence are rights that _____.

must be approved by the President


can be reviewed by the Supreme Court


must be granted by Congress


cannot be surrendered

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

(B) cannot be surrendered

Step-by-step explanation:

Unalienable rights are rights that we are unable to surrender. As indicated by the idea of basic rights found in the Declaration of Independence, freedom is such a right. That implies that on the off chance that we marked an agreement to be a slave, we would not have a commitment to keep it; and regardless of the agreement, nobody would reserve a privilege to our services.

Having rights that are inalienable does not mean they can't be assaulted by our being arbitrarily killed, imprisoned, or otherwise oppressed. It implies that such demonstrations are not ethically advocated and that we have a ground for moral complaint.

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