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Basic rights and obligations of citizens: (1) The basic rights of citizens are the rights and interests enjoyed by citizens in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution and guaranteed by the coercive power of the state. (2) The basic obligation of the people of Songmin is that citizens enjoy their rights in accordance with the Constitution.
There is a certain responsibility that must be assumed. (3) We refer to the rights and duties of citizens as stipulated in the Constitution as basic rights and duties.
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1. What is the fundamental difference between rights and obligations?
1) Rights and obligations are equal, citizens equally enjoy the rights stipulated by the Constitution and laws, and at the same time, they also need to equally perform the obligations stipulated in the Constitution and the law;
2) Rights and obligations are consistent, rights and obligations are different in different perspectives, and the rights and obligations of citizens are interdependent and inseparable.
2. Legal basis: Article 33 of the Constitution of the People's Republic of China.
All persons with the nationality of the People's Republic of China are citizens of the People's Republic of China.
All citizens of the People's Republic of China are equal before the law.
The State respects and protects human rights.
Every citizen enjoys the rights provided for by the Constitution and the law, and at the same time must fulfill the obligations set forth in the Constitution and the law.
2. What is the difference between rights and powers?
1. The subject of the act is different from the nature of the act, the subject of rights is generally citizens, legal persons and other social organizations, and the subject of power can only be the state organs and their specific staff members who have been delegated powers;
2. Coercion is different, the coercion of power is direct, and the coercion of power is mediated by power and is indirect;
3. The legal status is different, the right can be enjoyed by the right holder alone, and some of the rights enjoyed by the right subject can be transferred or the power only exists in the relationship with the specific counterpart.
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The fundamental difference between rights and obligations is that rights can be waived and obligations must be fulfilled. 1. Rights generally refer to the power that the law gives to people to realize their interests. Corresponding to obligations, it is one of the basic categories of jurisprudence, the core word of the concept of human rights, and the key word of legal norms.
The broadest and most practical content, implicit or explicit in family, society, state, and international relations. From a general point of view, rights are the permissions, identifications and guarantees granted by law to the acts or omissions of the right subject. 2. Obligation is willing, voluntary, and should.
Symmetry of rights. It is also known as "social responsibility" and "direct social obligation". The general belief in society that in order to satisfy the direct social rights enjoyed by participants in certain social relations, certain acts or omissions that others should take are the result of the direct action of objective social laws, people's daily production and life activities, and other conditions, and are generally confirmed by social norms such as habits and morality.
Obligations in this sense are the direct basis and social content of legal obligations. Symmetry of "legal rights". Also known as "legal obligation".
The law stipulates that the subject of rights must perform certain acts or not to perform certain acts, which is a condition for ensuring the realization of legal rights, and is a confirmation of certain direct social responsibilities by the state, which has a distinct class character, embodies the will of the ruling class, and safeguards the interests of the ruling class. Different types of legal obligations may be divided according to the Constitution and sectoral laws and other criteria.
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Rights: refers to the rights and interests that you have under the conditions prescribed by law. Obligations:
1) the right to equality, i.e. all citizens are equal before the law; (2) The right to vote and the right to stand for election, that is, citizens who have reached the age of 18 have the right to vote and to stand for election regardless of ethnicity, race, gender, occupation, family background, religious belief, education level, property status, or period of residence, except for those who have been deprived of their political rights in accordance with law; (3) freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of procession and of demonstration; (5) personal liberty, personal dignity, inviolability of the home and freedom of correspondence; (6) The right to work, the right to rest, the right to livelihood security for retirees, and the right to receive material assistance when citizens are old, sick or incapacitated; (7) The right to education, freedom to conduct scientific research, literary and artistic creation and other cultural activities, etc. The basic obligations of citizens to travel under the Constitution are: (1) to maintain national unity and the unity of all ethnic groups in the country; (2) Abide by the Constitution and laws, keep state secrets, take care of public property, abide by labor discipline, abide by public order, and respect social morality; (3) The obligation to safeguard the security, honor and interests of the motherland, and shall not endanger the security, honor and interests of the motherland; (4) the obligation to work; (5) the obligation to educate; (6) To defend the motherland, resist aggression, perform military service in accordance with the law and participate in militia organizations; (7) Pay taxes in accordance with the law; (8) Both husband and wife have the obligation to practice family planning, parents have the obligation to raise and educate their minor children, and adult children have the obligation to support and support their parents.
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Rights are what you can do or have, and obligations are what you must do or fulfill.
The so-called rights refer to the rights and interests enjoyed by citizens in accordance with the law, which is manifested in the fact that citizens who enjoy rights have the right to perform certain acts and require others to do corresponding acts. The so-called obligation refers to the duties that citizens should perform in accordance with the law, which is manifested in the fact that citizens with obligations must perform certain acts or prohibit certain acts. This principle can be understood in the following ways. >>>More
It can be distinguished from the following points:
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Rights are the stuff of the rich, and the people who don't have the money don't have to think about it. >>>More
The first is to set up a concept of "being" or "being" in the human brain that can be confirmed by sensory perception. Then, in reality, we use our senses (such as the five senses) to perceive whether the existence or state of things in reality is consistent with the concept and assumption of "being" or "existence" in our hearts. If it is consistent, it is there, and if it is inconsistent, it is not consistent, for example, it is not perceptible. >>>More
First of all, the stress ribs are elaborated.
Stress reinforcement, also called main reinforcement, refers to the steel bar that is mainly used to bear the tensile stress or compressive stress caused by the load on the basic components such as bending, compression and tension in the concrete structure, and its function is to make the bearing capacity of the component meet the structural functional requirements. Those that bear tensile stress are usually called longitudinal tensile steel bars and tensile steel bars, and those that bear compressive stress are usually called longitudinal compression bars and compression bars, collectively referred to as stressed bars. >>>More