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Bill of Rights and Respect

Posted on Friday, November 28, 2025
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by Robert B. Charles
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9 Comments
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Our Republic depends on it. Ask the average American if they believe in the Bill of Rights, and they will say yes if they know what it is. Ask what rights are in the First Amendment, and most miss it. So, how many know the Bill of Rights? Know the rights? More fundamentally, how many know they are all based on respect?

Maybe what ails us today is that citizens, especially those left-of-center, know little about history, fail to know what rights we have, and do not link them to respect.

In a recent FIRE poll (Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression) on the First Amendment, only 40 percent could name free speech. Only 26 percent could name religion, 20 percent assembly, 15 percent free press, and eight percent the right to petition. In short, few know even our First Amendment.

How many now the 2nd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th, 10th, or 14th Amendments, which guarantee the “right to keep and bear arms,” freedom from “unreasonable search and seizures,” guarantees of “due process” and “equal protection” (federal and state), fair and speedy trial, impartial jury, freedom against “cruel” punishment,” or states’ rights?  Very few.

Here is the kicker, and it explains much of what is wrong with America. If a majority do not know the First Amendment – free speech, religion, assembly, press, and petition – and other rights, who knows all are based on respect?

Our Bill of Rights is based on the Founders’ desire to avoid – ever again – loss of their God-given rights to speak, worship, govern, and protect themselves, be treated fairly, and maximize individual liberty. But they are also based on respect.

Think about it. You cannot acknowledge – or expect – the rights to free speech, worship, gun ownership, safe homes, fair treatment in courts, or limited government, unless you can give the same to all members of the society.

How do we do that? What does that require? What is unspoken in our Constitution, since it was elementary and assumed – yet without it we have no rights? Respect. We have to respect each other; otherwise, there is no right to be heard, right to worship, right to gun ownership, right to be treated fairly, right to be left alone.

In short, the entire Bill of Rights collapses without respect – for the assertion of rights it contains. This may sound simple, but it is at the bottom of why the left in this country shouts down others, acts illegally, suppresses what they do not want.

The left does not respect the Bill of Rights, the shared nature of rights, free speech, faith, or all rights asserted by conservatives. They eclipse the sun before it rises.

So, when you ask where common ground lies, where common sense begins, where harmony might – like a distant horizon – be found, you must begin with where we stand. It is unsettled, unfirm. We have lost perspective, lost mutual respect.

Everything – not just knowledge of rights, but making them real – depends on rediscovering respect, which boils down to “due regard” for the lives of others. All human behavior, from the simplest to the deepest, and all rights, start with mutual respect. Without it, relationships and republics collapse; it is the “sine qua non,” the “without which nothing” – so we have to rediscover the idea, teach it again.

Our Founders assumed we would never lose that “North Star,” mutual respect. Ralph Waldo Emerson said it this way: “Every human being, of whatever origin, of whatever station, deserves respect,” and society only works if we understand that. “We must each respect others even as we respect ourselves.”

Albert Einstein was, as always, more direct. “Respect is a two-way street; if you want to get it, you have to give it.” The boomerang does not always return, but our Founding Fathers thought we would understand. Our Republic depends on it.

Robert Charles is a former Assistant Secretary of State under Colin Powell, former Reagan and Bush 41 White House staffer, Maine attorney, ten-year naval intelligence officer (USNR), and 25-year businessman. He wrote “Narcotics and Terrorism” (2003), “Eagles and Evergreens” (North Country Press, 2018), and “Cherish America: Stories of Courage, Character, and Kindness” (Tower Publishing, 2024). He is the National Spokesman for AMAC. Today, he is running to be Maine’s next Governor (please visit BobbyforMaine.com to learn more)!

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Michael J
Michael J
6 months ago

I like to believe most older people still believe in the Constitution and the bill of rights, but my question is do the politicians, bureaucrats and judges even have a clue? Infringement is absolutely everywhere and the twisting and spinning of our rights is what they excel at. Now the dumbing down our schools makes society’s constitutional knowledge almost non-existing, now they can get away with just about anything. Who’s left to question validity?

SteveD
SteveD
6 months ago

Concur — this reflects the absolute failure of America’s government-funded, government-operated “education system” from pre-K to post-grad. Education is too important to be left in the hands of bureaucrats, lawyers, and labor bosses. Privatize it ALL, ASAP. The X Amendment re-emphasizes that powers not explicitly granted by the Constitution to the federal gov’t belong to the states and the citizens. When was the last time a federal law was overturned because it created/funded programs not specified in Article I Section 8 and the X Amendment? I don’t recall hearing of one in my adult lifetime [50+ years].

WJS
WJS
6 months ago

Mr. Charles – great and interesting article. I have said this before in other commentaries that no one running for a major public office should be allowed to apply until they can quote all of the Bill of Rights or pass a test being able to identify them. We elect too many individuals who have no conception of what they are. Look we just voted in a Supreme Court Justice that couldn’t even identify what a woman is. She should have been asked if she was one and explain why. Unfortunately she wasn’t asked that question. We have plenty of others in our H of R and senate that more than likely could not pass a Bill of Rights test.

Frank Bilek
Frank Bilek
6 months ago

Thank you for reminding everyone how basic the return of our contentment and peace can be.

Smike
Smike
6 months ago

This, without a doubt, is one of the best articles I’ve ever read on the Newsline forum. Thank you Robert Charles

Tenn
Tenn
6 months ago

You misspelled “Know” in the fourth paragraph

David
David
6 months ago

Proverbs 18:2 read it!!!!

JayNay
JayNay
6 months ago

Very well expressed. I agree and add might to the history of greats who admonished
this basic truth. Aretha Franklin RESPECT
Too – maybe knowing at least 5 of these could be added to the drivers license app and renewal.

Two chemist working in pharmacy drugstore. Male and female pharmacists checking inventory at pharmacy.
California Governor Gavin Newsom (C) speaks as Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (L) listens at a press conference near the closed I-10 elevated freeway following a large pallet fire, which occurred Saturday at a storage yard beneath the freeway, on November 13, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
ShotSpotter Gunshot Detection
St. Louis Cathedral in the French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana USA

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