No one can ever tell you what to do Beware their words So many quick to point the finger Without pointing their way first There's so much we take for granted Take control, and speak your voice Don't let them get the upper hand Before you have no choice In some countries even today police officers may search a person's home or office for evidence of wrongdoing and arrest him whenever they see fit. In the United States on the other hand the Fourth Amendment protects the individual and his property from unreasonable search and seizure by officers of the law. Double Jeopardy, the Fifth Amendment also guarantees the individual that he will not be tried before a federal court more than once for the same crime. A knock at the door whether by day or night, as a prelude to a search without authority of law but solely on the authority of police, is inconsistent with the conception of human rights, enshrined in the history of basic constitutional documents of English speaking peoples. Although the sanctity of ones privacy against illegal intrusion is one of the most important basic rights in our Constitution, experiences show that such intrusions occur at the hands of overzealous police officers. Freedom of speech and freedom of press; the right to speak his mind is close to the heart of every American, the constitution prohibits most forms of censorship over the press and speechmakers. The argument against censorship is clear: no government official should be permitted to dictate what ideas or beliefs we are entitled to hear or believe. Both good and evil should be averted by more speech and not enforced silence. Similarly while a person is free to make speeches on public streets he may be prevented from doing so when he uses a loud or raucous amplifier, which disturbs the public tranquility.