None of the rights in the Bill of Rights was granted by the Constitution.
They are human rights that further the advancement of the individual
and their society, the purpose of our Declaration of Independence,
and the basis of our Constitution. The Bill of Rights was written to
protect those rights from infringement by an overbearing government.
As amendments to the federal Constitution, they were originally biding
only on the federal government. The idea apparently was that the
state governments, being closer and more answerable to their citizens,
would be less likely to infringe upon their citizens' rights than the more
remote federal government. But all the rights listed in the BoR predate
the Constitution.