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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. Freedom is not only a mindset of those who seek life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, but it is also a birthright afforded those who live beneath the umbrella of a democratic society. National constitutions bestow the multifaceted components of freedom upon their people; however, myriad countries are ruled by autocratic leaders who refuse to recognize the inherent human right of freedom and instead condemn their respective populace to a dictatorial hell on earth. America's Constitution has long been the prototype for other democratic nations to follow, with arguably the most important factor being its extensive attention to personal freedoms. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCFreedmDef.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
National constitutions bestow the multifaceted components of freedom upon their people; however, myriad countries are ruled by autocratic leaders who refuse to recognize the inherent human right of freedom and
instead condemn their respective populace to a dictatorial hell on earth. Americas Constitution has long been the prototype for other democratic nations to follow, with arguably the most important
factor being its extensive attention to personal freedoms. The inimitable Karl Marx conveyed it best when he stated mans entitlement to personal freedoms is not a contrived reality:
The rights of man are not...a gift of nature, nor a legacy from past history, but the reward of a struggle against the accident of birth and against the privileges
which history has hitherto transmitted from generation to generation (Marx, 1978, p. 40). The concept was clear and the idea
was even carried out for a time, but the overall effectiveness of Thomas Jeffersons revolutionary vision of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness had still not reached the level
to which he had visualized. Originally created to provide for the protection of a persons natural freedoms, the ability to make his own way and to obtain contentment without
the infringement of government or any other oppressive source, Jefferson ultimately accomplished what no political leader had considered important enough to do: champion the cause for the common man.
Not only did Jefferson champion the cause against simulated aristocracy whereby the wealthy and powerful sought to rule the masses with unyielding restraint, but
he earnestly furthered the foundation heretofore laid by Locke: Man is born into natural aristocracy by virtue of being a human being and living amidst the global population. No
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