
Norwin Area Republican News
Stay informed with timely updates and insights on Republican elections and events shaping our Norwin community.
2 min read
The primary election season is here. This is the time to plan ahead and act to preserve your rights and freedoms.
Select the EVENTS page (top right, 3 horizontal lines) to see how you can make a difference in your community.
Voting in all elections, including off year elections, is one of your most important privileges. If you're over 18 years of age, you should register to vote.
Don't let Democrats ever again censor your online speech;
demand you take untested vaccines;
limit your travel options;
import and exploit illegal aliens for cheap labor;
close your business and fine you for trying to make a living;
restrict your operating hours;
force you to wear a mask;
mandate the use of nonsensical pronouns;
promote "mostly peaceful" arson, violence, and blocking traffic in our cities;
incite murder of US politicians and conservative spokespersons like Charlie Kirk (RIP) ;
lie about effective medical treatments;
invade and disrupt your places of worship;
tax you for woke programs in foreign countries;
allow men in women's spaces, locker rooms, bathrooms, and sports teams;
use your tax dollars to murder the unborn and profit from the sale of their organs;
provide sex surgeries for people in prison, for our troops,
hire or promote unqualified workers or college entrance based strictly on sex, gender expression, or the color of their skin
or to permanently mutilate mentally ill youth who Democrats program to believe surgery and hormones can change their God-given sexual chromosomes.
Your rights include:
The First Amendment
Express ideas through speech and the press, to assemble or gather with a group to protest, or for other reasons, and to ask the government to fix problems. It also protects the right to religious beliefs and practices. It prevents the government from creating or favoring a religion.
The Second Amendment
The Second Amendment protects the right to keep and bear arms.
The Third Amendment
The Third Amendment prevents government from forcing homeowners to allow soldiers to use their homes. Before the Revolutionary War, laws gave British soldiers the right to take over private homes.
The Fourth Amendment
The Fourth Amendment bars the government from unreasonable search and seizure of an individual or their private property.
The Fifth Amendment
The Fifth Amendment provides several protections for people accused of crimes. It states that serious criminal charges must be started by a grand jury. A person cannot be tried twice for the same offense (double jeopardy) or have property taken away without just compensation. People have the right against self-incrimination and cannot be imprisoned without due process of law (fair procedures and trials).
The Sixth Amendment
The Sixth Amendment provides additional protections to people accused of crimes, such as the right to a speedy and public trial, trial by an impartial jury in criminal cases, and to be informed of criminal charges. Witnesses must face the accused, and the accused is allowed his or her own witnesses and to be represented by a lawyer.
The Seventh Amendment
The Seventh Amendment extends the right to a jury trial in Federal civil cases.
The Eighth Amendment
The Eighth Amendment bars excessive bail and fines and cruel and unusual punishment.
The Ninth Amendment
The Ninth Amendment states that listing specific rights in the Constitution does not mean that people do not have other rights that have not been spelled out.
The Tenth Amendment
The Tenth Amendment says that the Federal Government only has those powers delegated in the Constitution. If it isn’t listed, it belongs to the states or to the people.