Perhaps not in Denver soon. I’ve heard that in Civics, they dropped teaching the three branches of government to make room in the curriculum for a unit on how to protest and a unit on immigration issues. Those units are a thing but give me time to confirm or deny what topics are being dropped for them.
Prisoners have some First Amendment rights, but not the same as everyone. Prisons can put restrictions on their right to communicate with the outside world, depending on the facts of the particular case and prison security.
Neither of them has the right of free association or the right of assembly. Who they can associate with and who they can assemble with is controlled by other people; and this is entirely legal.
Neither of them has the right to bear arms. Babies and many felons don’t have the right to vote.
If we’re going to be nitpicking, and everybody is, they are set out not in the original Constitution but in the First Amendment. The right not to pay poll taxes - one of the other answers - is confirmed by the Twenty-Fourth Amendment.
The trick part of the question is the word “everyone.” Everyone is protected by the First Amendment, including non-citizens, but only citizens are protected by the Twenty-Fourth.
Sure, obviously the answer wanted is freedom of speech and freedom of assembly but that set of answers was far more confusing than the others I saw.
Yes, but the resources are an outside factor. The willingness to make the jump into a completely new situation is an internal factor.
Not everyone has that. Many people would just accept the problems of their current situation because it’s what they’re used to rather than make a big change. America was made by people from all over the world who chose to move forward rather than staying where they are.
Yes, I meant freedom of speech and association. Nobody has unlimited freedom of speech or association. First Amendment ‘rights’ are limited when narrowly tailored restrictions are necessary for a compelling government interest. The same rule determines the limits of everyone’s First Amendment rights, in every context (to the best of my knowledge). For example, students, members of the military, protesters, people walking in the streets, people posting online, &etc.
So really you don’t lose your First Amendment rights by virtue of being young, or being incarcerated, or any other personal status.
You apparently did not understand why I was replying to Peter Morris.
Both quiz answers appear in the Constitution. His post made it appear as if the poll tax answer was not in the Constitution. I just nitpicked his wording, pointing out that the banning of poll tax was an Amendment just as freedom of speech and assembly were.