The Humanitarian Alliance Constitution
- Free from unwanted manipulation.
- Freedom of speech and thought.
- To live within total equality.
- To have democratic representation.
- To live under the rule of law.
- To be free to follow imperatives that do not harm others.
- To be allowed human rights.
- To live in a free economy.
- To be free to defend home.
Later Interpretation of Mention
At the same time as the signing of the Constitution by the member states of the HA, the Mental Electrical Intelligence Act 2024 as written in UK law, was adopted by the Humanitarian Alliance. The Supreme Court, part of HAJaR, shortly after the founding of the HA, felt there was need to provided clarification on the scope and points of the Constitution.- The Supreme Court interpreted as follows:
- EI's are recognised as human life and so are protected by the Constitution.
- Article 1 includes the right to not be surgically, chemically or code altered. It also includes the right not to have your data mined to be unknowingly coerced into action.
- Article 6 includes the right to having a family.
- Since 2088, Article 7 refers directly to the Human Rights Act 2088, which includes the right to live in dignity.
Constitutional Watchdogs
Following the 2208 Iron Wall incident, the HA put EI's in charge of safeguarding the Constitution. They are known as the Constitutional Watchdogs.