30 Human Rights Of The Universal Declaration

  1. No One Can Take Away Your Human Rights.
  1. Workers’ Rights.
  1. Marriage and family
  1. We all have the same right to use the law
  1. The Right to Trial.
  1. The right to life
  1. The right of education
  1. Freedom of expression
  1. Your Human Rights Are Protected by Law.
  1. We are all born free and equal
  1. The right to democracy
  1. The Right to Privacy

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  1. A fair and free world
  1. Food and shelter for all
  1. the right to your own things
  1. No torture
  1. Do not discriminate

24.- Social security

  1. We’re Always Innocent Till Proven Guilty.
  1. We´re all protected by the law
  1. Copyright
  1. The right to play
  1. Freedom of thought
  1. No Unfair Detainment
  1. Responsability.

26.- The right of public assambly

  1. No slavery
  1. Freedom to Move
  1. The Right to Seek a Safe Place to Live
  1. Right to a Nationality.

7 characteristics of the Human Rights:
1. Inherent: you have them since you are born.
2. Fundamental: with out them you won't have dignity.
3. Inalienable: they cannot be taken away.
4. Inprescriptable: they cannot been lost.
5. Indivisible: theycannot be dived.
6. Universal: everyone hathem in everywhere.
7. Interdependent: they depend ones in the others.

Facts about HR

Afghanistan has attempted to reintroduce public stoning for adulterers while women are forced to undergo vaginal examinations to prove virginity.

Violence against women and girls is the most pervasive violation of human rights in the world today with 603 million women living in countries where domestic violence is not yet considered a crime.

Frank Sinatra was a big activist within the civil rights movement, refusing to stay at hotels that didn’t enable “blacks”. He used his mafia ties to help get labor unions behind John F. Kennedy because he knew they shared similar opinions on equal rights.

The film Lord of War (2005) was officially endorsed by the human rights group Amnesty International for highlighting the arms trafficking by the international arms industry.

In 2014 more than 1/3 of governments around the world, 62 out of 160 locked up prisoners of conscience – people who were simply exercising their rights and freedoms.

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