You stand with the Bill of Rights, where a nation tried to put boundaries into words. These amendments are not decorations; they are warnings—rules meant to restrain power when fear, anger, or certainty begin to swell. They protect speech, belief, privacy, due process, and the fragile idea that the government must justify itself to the individual. As you reflect, notice how rights are both simple and contested. Their meaning depends on context, interpretation, and the courage to insist on them when it’s inconvenient. This tour invites you to see liberty as something maintained—through argument, precedent, and the ongoing discipline of limits.