Kids Are Americans Too (9 page)

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Authors: Bill O'Reilly

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You: Now, do I know everything about my rights?

O'Reilly: No.

You: When will I?

O'Reilly: Never.

You: (sigh)

O'Reilly: Look, what's true today will not be true tomorrow. The players keep changing. Ideas keep changing. Who knows what new toy your kids will have someday that will drive their teachers nuts? The rules have to change with the times.

You: Like, I mean, chaos.

O'Reilly: No, no, not chaos. The good ship Constitution stays afloat, no matter what. You have to believe that.

You: Well, I think now I do.

O'Reilly: Okay, but it doesn't steer itself. You and all of your kid friends have to keep it on course. It adjusts to the weather, the heaving seas, but smart people have to take turns at the helm.

You: Are you running for office?

O'Reilly: (laughs) No, but I want you kids to run for office someday, and support candidates, and stay involved in this rights business for the rest of your lives. You have to join the line that goes back to Ben and Tom.

You: I'll think about it.

O'Reilly: You do that.

(You and I shake hands firmly.)

Congratulations!

You've completed a book that should help you become a better American. And the country needs you. That's right…the country needs you.

During my trip to Iraq in December 2006, I met hundreds of American military people ages eighteen to twenty-five. They are young adults, as you will be in a very short time. They are sacrificing greatly, trying to bring freedom and “rights” to oppressed people.

I really respect those young Americans.

Like millions of other Americans before them, our military people are willing to die so that strangers can have the right to freedom. How noble is that? And how powerful is the right to freedom?

So, when thinking about your rights as a kid, please think about our military people. They are the direct successors of Ben,
Tom, and all the rest who have kept focused on the “rights” thing throughout the history that gave you the life you have now. These young people in uniform today should make you proud. And so should your unique country, which stands for freedom throughout the world.

Thanks for reading this book, kid.

I wish you a great life.

Competing rights

A student you know has the right to privacy, like all the rest of us. You have the right to protect yourself from being harmed, like all the rest of us. Has he hidden a loaded pistol in his school locker? For the school to search the locker without his permission, your right to life outweighs his right to privacy. Each right is golden in itself, but sometimes they have to be weighed against each other for the greatest possible good.

Due process

The rules! You have the right to be protected from a government that would arrest, try, and convict you unfairly. Your rights to fairness at every step of the process are guaranteed. Tom, Ben, and
the rest believed that human beings with power can't always be trusted. They knew from experience. A judge who can be bribed? A prosecutor who will convict an innocent person in order to further his political ambitions? A rogue cop who might “plant” evidence? These things happen. The Philadelphia guys knew it. But they also knew that laws and procedures could be set down in clear English so that good people could try to follow them.

Original intent

That's what the writers of the Constitution were actually thinking back then…or would be thinking if they knew about video surveillance and DNA testing and all the rest of the developments in our century. Is it possible to know for sure what they would have been thinking? Well, no. Not exactly. But we all have to work at it, or the system falls apart.

Parental obligation

This is what you have the right to expect from your parent(s) or legal guardian(s), as defined by your state. Of course, they're not supposed to harm you and they're required to take care of your needs, as long as you're a minor. Even so, some courts have found gray areas here.

Probable cause

This is a concrete reason to suspect that you're guilty of something. If someone else's missing iPod falls out of your jacket pocket, it's “probable” that you stole it. That's not proof, but it's reason enough for the authorities to search your person and otherwise pursue the truth. Same idea with the scent of marijuana on your clothes, or an open bottle of vodka visible through your car window.

Reasonable suspicion

A lesser standard than probable cause, this right is given to your school authorities by your state in order to protect the students in their care. In other words, as we talked about earlier, they can search your locker without “probable cause” but with “reasonable suspicion.” For a more precise definition of this term, many a lawsuit has been taken to the courts. (You are not surprised.)

How you can

Get in Touch with Me

E-mail:O'[email protected]

snail mail:

Bill O'Reilly

 

c/o HarperCollins

 

10 E. 53rd Street

 

7th floor

 

New York, NY 10022-5299

About the Authors

B
ILL
O'R
EILLY
and
a two-time Emmy Award winner for excellence in reporting, served as a national correspondent for ABC News and anchor of the nationally syndicated news magazine program
Inside Edition
before becoming executive producer and anchor of the wildly popular
The O'Reilly Factor
. He is the author of the megabestsellers
The O'Reilly Factor, The No Spin Zone, Who's Looking Out for You?, The O'Reilly Factor for Kids, Culture Warrior
, and the novel
Those Who Trespass
, and holds master's degrees from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and Boston University.

C
HARLES
F
LOWERS
,
award-winning author or coauthor of sixty-two books, has also written television documentaries, magazine articles, art and theater criticism, and opinion columns in such publications as the
New York Times, The Virginia Quarterly Review
, and
City Newspaper
. A former newspaper reporter, high school teacher, and university professor, he wrote the screenplay for the feature film
The Nation
, and, with composer Sorrel Hays, the three-act opera
Our Giraffe
.

www.billoreilly.com
www.CharlesFlowers.com

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

Also by
Bill O'Reilly

Culture Warrior

The O'Reilly Factor for Kids:

A Survival Guide for America's Families
(coauthored with Charles Flowers)

Those Who Trespass

Who's Looking Out for You?

The No Spin Zone: Confrontations with
the Powerful and Famous in America

The O'Reilly Factor:

The Good, the Bad, and the Completely
Ridiculous in American Life

Credits

Jacket design by Richard Aquan

Jacket photographs: Bill O' Reilly by Deborah Feingold; children by Flying Colours Ltd / Getty Images

Some images not available for electronic edition.

KIDS ARE AMERICANS TOO
. Copyright © 2007 by Bill O'Reilly and Charles Flowers. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

ePub edition September 2007 ISBN 9780061746161

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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