This is placeholder text for your new wiki page. Replace it with your own.
Comments
gabriella
Mar 19, 2009
The first amendment of the Bill of Rights deals with five key freedoms. Freedom of Assembly is one of them. The Freedom of Assembly allows people to assemble (possibly protest) without fear that the government will harass them. The only way the government has the right to intervene, is if the assembly taking pace is not conducted in a peaceful manner, or if assembly is taking place on private grounds
/groups/constitution/search/index.rss?tag=hotlist/groups/constitution/search/?tag=hotWhat’s HotHotListHot!?tag=hot0/groups/constitution/sidebar/HotListNo items tagged with hot.hot/groups/constitution/search/index.rss?sort=modifiedDate&kind=all&sortDirection=reverse&excludePages=wiki/welcomelist/groups/constitution/search/?sort=modifiedDate&kind=all&sortDirection=reverse&excludePages=wiki/welcomeRecent ChangesRecentChangesListUpdates?sort=modifiedDate&kind=all&sortDirection=reverse&excludePages=wiki/welcome0/groups/constitution/sidebar/RecentChangesListmodifiedDateallRecent ChangesRecentChangesListUpdateswiki/welcomeNo recent changes.reverse5search
Comments
gabriella
Mar 19, 2009
The first amendment of the Bill of Rights deals with five key freedoms. Freedom of Assembly is one of them. The Freedom of Assembly allows people to assemble (possibly protest) without fear that the government will harass them. The only way the government has the right to intervene, is if the assembly taking pace is not conducted in a peaceful manner, or if assembly is taking place on private grounds