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While the Constitution was being ratified, several Antifederalist state representatives only approved the document with the expectation that a bill of rights would be added afterwards to protect the people from an overly powerful government. However, because Federalist James Madison worried that a bill of rights would send the message that any other rights not listed were not protected by the government, he proposed the addition of a statement to protect unenumerated rights. His proposal resulted in the addition of the Ninth Amendment, which states that just because some rights are named in the Constitution does not mean those not mentioned are not protected by the government. 

The Ninth Amendment, which is notoriously vague, has been interpreted differently by many different Supreme Court judges and Constitutional scholars. Three prevalent interpretations of these unnamed rights are rights that are defined on a state-by-state basis, the natural rights of life, liberty, and property each individual has, or any imaginable right that the Constitution does not explicitly deny. Another interpretation ignores the Ninth Amendment because it does not concretely prove the existence of other rights or explain them in enough detail to be valid in a court case. 

Estelle Griswold used this amendment in Griswold v. Connecticut when she argued that married couples have a right to privacy and therefore a right to use contraception. Although privacy is never explicitly mentioned in the Constitution, Griswold used the Ninth Amendment and several other amendments to win her case, arguing that privacy is an assumed right of the American people and cannot be restricted by the law. Griswold v. Connecticut provides an example of how several judges interpreted this amendment differently, however, as only Justice Goldberg believed the right to privacy was represented in the Ninth Amendment while other judges found it in the Fourteenth Amendment or did not find privacy in the Constitution at all. 

I am most strongly persuaded that the “unenumerated rights” protected by the Ninth Amendment refer to natural or unalienable rights. These rights are featured in the writings of many of the Constitution’s framers and their Enlightenment contemporaries and are seen clearly in the Declaration of Independence. Because it was not specifically stated that the rights would be defined by the states or that they were completely limitless, I think the framers were referring to their own ideas of basic human rights, a concept that heavily influenced the rest of the Constitution and especially the Bill of Rights. I would change this amendment to specify what kind of rights it was meant to protect because I think its vagueness restricts its power. By not clearly defining what it protects, the amendment allows many potential rights, such as the right to privacy, to be ignored by someone whose interpretation of the amendment did not include that right. If the Ninth Amendment had specifically stated that it, for example, protected natural rights, modern judges would be more likely to interpret it accurately instead of ignoring or abusing it. 

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The context that gives rise to the 9th amendment is the inclusion of the bill of rights in the constitution. The anti-federalists were adamant that the bill of rights be included in the constitution because if it wasn’t, the central government would have too much power. The Federalists did not want a bill of rights because they felt that every liberty could not be written and it was best to trust the government to protect the people’s liberties. The bill of rights was a list of rights that James Madison created in 1791, that lists freedoms like the first amendment. The founding father took the federalists and anti-federalists views into account when creating the 9th amendment as it was a compromise. The bill of rights was included in the constitution but the 9th amendment was created which made both parties content as the anti-federalists got a list of specific rights the federal government can’t deny them while the federalists got reassurance that natural rights would be protected. This leads to the common interpretation of the law, which is that the fundamental rights that are not enumerated in the constitution are protected under this law. The 9th amendment safeguards against the narrowing of rights by the government by ensuring that the individual liberties that are fundamental to society are protected.

The 9th amendment is very clear and nobody argues about the fact that laws that are fundamental that are not enumerated are protected. Recent discussion has arisen because of the question, “Which rights are fundamental?” There are a couple of different views on what the 9th amendment is supposed to protect. In the literalist interpretation of justice, Samuel Alito, only the rights “deeply rooted in the Nation’s history and tradition.” Abortion, along with several other important liberties, does not fall under the 9th’s protection with this interpretation. The progressive view of the 9th amendment is that it includes “individual privacy and personal autonomy.” These differences in interpreting what law is fundamental has led to some of the most famous court cases as in Roe vs Wade, three justices said that the 9th amendment justified their decision to side with Roe as they interpreted the right to an abortion was protected by the 9th amendment? This wasn’t the first the 9th amendment had been utilized in the court of law as in Griswold vs Connecticut. The right to buy contraceptives while married was deemed as protected by the 9th amendment.

The 9th amendment correlates directly to the debate we had in class about whether to include the bill of rights in the constitution or leave it out. The inclusion of the bill of rights in the constitution was one of the main reasons the federalists and anti-federalist could not ratify the constitution. The 9th amendment solved that problem. The 9th amendment connects to the broader theme of the struggle between the power of the nation government and the people. The power struggle takes place throughout most all the constitution as the two main parties, the federalists and anti-federalists, compromised in the constitution’s drafting. Recently, I have leaned towards the progressive view of the 9th amendment as I view it as fundamental that laws that are necessary to society are protected. One change I would include in this amendment is the addition of laws that are deemed fundamental because it gives a starting point for future court cases that interpret if laws are fundamental and protected by the 9th amendment, or if they are not.

Roe V. Wade and Supreme Court Abortion Cases. Last modified September 28, 2022.

     Accessed May 30, 2023. https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/

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