Ethnic groups in the Philippines and Ninth Amendment to the United States Constitution: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox US Constitution}}
'''Ethnicities of Filipinos''' can be based on several factors like [[ancestry|racial ancestry]], [[language]], [[religion]] and a shared [[history]]. A large majority of the [[Philippines|Philippine]] population belong to Christian, lowland [[Austronesian]] languages-speaking groups, admixed in various degrees with the Southern Chinese. From north to south, these are the [[Ilocano people|Ilocanos]], the [[Pangasinense people|Pangasinenses]], the [[Kapampangan people|Kapampangans]], the [[Tagalog people|Tagalogs]], the [[Bicolano people|Bicolanos]] and the [[Bisaya]]. In [[Mindanao]], there are several ethnic groups of similar ancesty, but whose religion is [[Islam]], and whose culture is not as [[Western world|westernized]] as the Christian [[Filipino people|Filipino's]]. They are collectively called [[Muslim Filipino]]s or [[Filipino Muslim|Moros]]. There are various [[List of tribal groups in the Philippines|tribal groups]] throughout the Philippine archipelago who are neither Muslim nor Christian, and are least influenced by [[Islamic]], [[Hispanic]] and [[United States|American]] cultures. In centers of commerce or agriculture, there are many Filipinos of [[Chinese Filipino|Chinese]] and [[List_of_articles_on_Hispanic_Filipino|Spanish]] descent. Intermarriage is not uncommon between Filipinos of different ethnicities. The Philippines is one of the most diverse countries in terms of ethnicity.<ref>The Philippines ranks 8th among 240 countries in terms of diversity. YEOH Kok Kheng, ''Towards an Index of Ethnic Fractionalization'', Table 1.</ref>
[[Image: Bill_of_Rights_Pg1of1_AC.jpg|190px|thumb| The Bill of Rights in the [[National Archives and Records Administration|National Archives]]]]
 
'''Amendment IX''' (the '''Ninth Amendment''') to the [[United States Constitution]], which is part of the [[United States Bill of Rights|Bill of Rights]], addresses rights of the people that are not specifically enumerated in the Constitution.
==History==
 
===Negritos=Text==
The first people to come to the Philippines are the [[Negritos]], the ancestors of today's [[Aeta]] people of the Philippines. They are considered as the aborigines of the [[East Indies]], and are related to the [[Orang Asli]] people of Malaysia, and to the [[Andamanese]] islanders of the Andaman and Nicobar islands of India. They are largely independent and live separately of the rest of the Filipinos who are descendants of later arriving peoples.
 
{{cquote|The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.}}
===[[Senoi|Senoi (Australoid Sakai)]]===
The second people to come to the Philippines are the Australoid-Sakais, related closely to the aborigines of Australia. Descendants of these Australoid-Sakais were largely assimilated with the [[Negritos]] through considerable admixing. Closely following the Australoid-Sakais were the Proto-Austronesians (called by some as Proto-Malay), people of extremely short stature and a largely hair-covered skin. The legacy of the Australoid-Sakai and the Proto-Austronesians to the mainstream Filipinos' racial mixture was very dismal.
 
===Austronesians=Adoption==
When the US Constitution was sent to the states for ratification in 1787, [[Anti-Federalists]] argued that a Bill of Rights should be added. One argument of [[Federalism (United States)|Federalists]] against the addition of a Bill of Rights, during the debates about [[History of the United States Constitution|ratification of the Constitution]], was that a listing of rights could problematically enlarge the powers specified in [[Article One of the United States Constitution|Article One, Section 8]] of the new Constitution, by implication. For example, in [[The Federalist Papers|Federalist]] [http://www.constitution.org/fed/federa84.htm 84,] [[Alexander Hamilton]] asked, "why declare that things shall not be done which there is no power to do?" Likewise, James Madison explained to Thomas Jefferson as follows: "I conceive that in a certain degree ... the rights in question are reserved by the manner in which the federal powers are granted"<ref>James Madison, [http://www.constitution.org/jm/17881017_tj.htm Letter to Thomas Jefferson] (October 17, 1788). Madison often expressed this idea, for example in a [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/mjmtext:@field(DOCID+@lit(jm050127)) letter to George Washington]on December 5, 1789 ("If a line can be drawn between the powers granted and the rights retained, it would seem to be the same thing, whether the latter be secured by declaring that they shall not be abridged, or that the former shall not be extended").</ref> in [[Article One of the United States Constitution|Article One, Section 8]] of the Constitution.
During the Iron Age, the Austronesians descended from the Yunnan Plateau of [[China]] and travelled towards the [[Philippines|Philippine archipelago]] crossing [[Taiwan]]. As the Philippine islands were one of the starting point of Austronesian migration to the Pacific, it contains one of the purest Austronesian strains. The Philippine Austronesian lineage is primarily from the [[Taiwanese aborigines]], and not from the [[Malays]]. The first major Austronesian settlement to the Philippines was commenced by the Nesiot people (called 'Indonesian' in textbooks, a tall and sturdy people with some Caucasoid mixture, who pushed the Negritos, as well as the Australoid-Sakais and the Proto-Austronesians to the mountains. From these Nesiot came the [[Igorot]] (Igorot) people of northern [[Luzon]], as well as the hill tribes of Mindanao island (''Lumad''). The Nesiots are also the ancestors of the [[Bataks]] of Sumatra, as well as the [[Dyaks]] of Borneo. The second major Austronesian settlement to the Philippines came around 300 BCE with the migration of Austronesians from what is now Taiwan to the Philippines. From these Austronesians came the ancestors of some of today's northern Luzon hill tribes. Also, these Austronesians have contributed a lot to the mainstream Filipinos' racial mix.
 
The Anti-Federalists persisted in favor of a Bill of Rights during the ratification debates, and consequently several of the state ratification conventions provided their assent with a coda attached, requesting a Bill of Rights to be added. In 1788, the ratification by the Commonwealth of Virginia attempted to solve the problem that Hamilton and the Federalists had identified, by proposing a constitutional amendment specifying:<ref>[http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/const/ratva.htm Virginia Ratification Resolution] (June 26, 1788)</ref>
On AD 900, extensive trade has brought immigrants from Champa, called ''Orang Dampuan'', (now in present-day [[Cambodia]]) to the [[Sulu Archipelago]], where they have intermarried with the Buranuns, the original natives of [[Sulu]]. Following these, immigrants from Banjarmasin, called ''Orang Bandjar'' (now in [[Kalimantan]], [[Indonesia]]) have intermarried also with the natives of Sulu, bringing with them their heavily Indianized culture. It must be noted that the people of Champa as well as that of Banjarmasin are of Austronesian ancestry.
 
{{quote|That those clauses which declare that Congress shall not exercise certain powers be not interpreted in any manner whatsoever to extend the powers of Congress. But that they may be construed either as making exceptions to the specified powers where this shall be the case, or otherwise as inserted merely for greater caution.}}
===Southern Chinese===
Since the 9th century, the Chinese have conducted trade with the people of Luzon, Mindoro, Palawan, and Mindanao. Many Chinese have settled in the country and have intermarried with the local Austronesian peoples. From the mixture of the native Austronesian peoples and the immigrant Chinese came the present-day mainstream Filipinos. Following the example of the Chinese, the Arabs, Indians, Persians, as well as the Japanese arrived subsequently.
 
This proposal ultimately led to the Ninth Amendment. In 1789, while introducing to the [[United States House of Representatives|House of Representatives]] twelve draft Amendments, [[James Madison]] addressed what would become the 9th Amendment as follows:<ref>James Madison,[http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/bill_of_rightss11.html Speech Introducing Bill of Rights] (June 8, 1789)</ref>
===Successive immigration===
Modern migrations have also enriched the makeup of the Philippines. From the 16th century up to the late 19th century, there was a minor settlement of colonial administrators from Mexico and Spain. Some had intermarried with local Filipinas, giving rise to the small Spanish-mestizo community. Further migrations from the [[United States of America]], [[Europe]], [[India]], [[Saudi Arabia]], [[Korea]], [[Vietnam]], and [[Japan]] have richly contributed to the makeup of the Philippines.
 
{{quote|It has been objected also against a [[United States Bill of Rights|Bill of Rights]], that, by enumerating particular exceptions to the grant of power, it would disparage those rights which were not placed in that enumeration; and it might follow by implication, that those rights which were not singled out, were intended to be assigned into the hands of the General Government, and were consequently insecure. This is one of the most plausible arguments I have ever heard against the admission of a bill of rights into this system; but, I conceive, that it may be guarded against. I have attempted it, as gentlemen may see by turning to the last clause of the fourth resolution.}}
==Filipino Ethnic Groups==
===Aeta (Negrito)===
[[Aeta]] ([[Negritos]]), (in Filipino, ''Ayta'', ''Aeta'', ''Ita'', ''Ata'', ''Agta'', ''Remontado'', ''Baluga'', or ''Remontado''): the Aetas are descended from the Negritos and Australoid-Sakais who first settled the archipelago during the [[Ice Age]]. They are the poorest and most disadvantaged class of the Filipino population. Their numbers have been decreasing rapidly and are estimated to number between 20,000 and 30,000, or 0.03% of the population. Most speak their tribal languages and have little or no understanding of Filipino. The government has sponsored educational programmes as well as encouraging school attendance, though many of them still enounter difficulties. They are also known by their other names, such as [[Aeta]], in Zambales, [[Aeta|Ita]] in Pampanga, [[Ati]] in Panay, [[Baluga]] in Abra and Pampanga, [[Dumagat]] in Aurora, and [[Remontados]] in [[Rizal]] and [[Quezon]].
*Region: Scattered throughout the Philippine archipelago: most commonly found in Zambales, Pampanga, Bataan, Nueva Vizcaya, Aurora, Quezon, Abra, Rizal, Isabela, Antique, and Negros Occidental provinces.
*Language: [[Katabaga]] (an unclassified, extinct language presumed to be that of the Negritos. Presently, they speak Kapampangan, Tagalog, Ilocano, Kiniray-a, and other dialects.)
 
Like Hamilton, Madison was concerned that enumerating various rights could "enlarge the powers delegated by the constitution". Id. Here is the draft of the Ninth Amendment that Madison submitted to Congress in order to solve this problem:
===Austronesian-Southern Chinese===
Invading Austronesian-speaking migrants arrived in successive waves over a thousand years ago and settled throughout the entire archipelago, largely displacing the aboriginal Aeta inhabitants. Many of these Austronesian-speaking migrants have intermarried with the Southern Chinese, who also populated the archipelago, which gave rise to the present Filipinos. They account for the majority of the populationMany live in the cities, although a great number still live traditional lifestyles in the mountains and rural areas. Many Filipinos are trilingual, and are able to speak one of over a hundred regional languages, the national language [[Filipino language|Filipino]] (based on [[Tagalog language|Tagalog]]), and [[English language|English]].
 
{{quote|The exceptions here or elsewhere in the constitution, made in favor of particular rights, shall not be so construed as to diminish the just importance of other rights retained by the people; or as to enlarge the powers delegated by the constitution; but either as actual limitations of such powers, or as inserted merely for greater caution. Id.}}
====Tagalog====
[[Tagalog people|Tagalog]]s are the largest Filipino ethnic group. They live in the rolling plains stretching from Bulacan to Bicol, which incidentally, includes present-day Manila, making them the dominant ethnic group politically, educationally, and economically. Most Tagalogs are either professionals, employees, or agriculturalists. The term Tagalog came from the Tagalog words "taga" and "ilog", which means 'from the river'. In Quezon province, the Tagalogs have intermarried with the Bicolano ethnic group. Almost all Tagalogs are Christians.
*Region: National Capital Region, Bulacan, Bataan, Zambales, Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Quezon, Marinduque, and Oriental Mindoro provinces.
*Language: [[Tagalog language|Tagalog]], Filipino, English
 
This was an intermediate form of the Ninth Amendment that borrowed language from the Virginia proposal, while foreshadowing the final version. Like Madison's draft, the final text of the Ninth Amendment speaks of other rights than those enumerated in the Constitution. The character of those other rights was indicated by Madison in his speech introducing the Bill of Rights (emphasis added):
====Visayan====
The term Visayan has been used since the Spanish era to refer to the scaterred groupings of tribes found from Cuyo Islands in the west to Samar in the east. The term was proposed to be originally coming from the word 'Vijaya', to refer to the extent of [[Sri-Vijaya]]n influence to the Philippines, but this has not been proven.
=====Central Visayan=====
Central Visayans, or [[Sugboanon]]s are the second largest FIlipino ethnic group. They are one of the most regionalistic and staunch of all Filipino ethnic groups. They live in the eastern half of Negros island, as well as in Cebu and Siquijor islands. Migrations further enlarged the domains of the Central Visayans. Intermarriages between other ethnic groups in the places they migrate gave rise to the various Central Visayan dialects, such as Surigaonon dialect, Davaoeňo dialect, Boholano dialect, Butuanon dialect, and others. [[Image:Hilario davide.jpg|frame|left|Hilario Davide, Jr.,a Cebuano government official]]
In Cebu province, they sing the national anthem in Cebuano, and many official documents are printed bilingually with English and Cebuano. Filipino is barely spoken, as a form of resistance against the legislation that made Tagalog the sole basis of Filipino (which is to be made the official language) since the 1920s. Being islandic in nature, common means of livelihood include fishing. Once the largest ethnic group, the Central Visayans were outnumbered by the Tagalogs in the 1980s. The Cebuanos are predominantly Christians.
*Region: the Visayan islands all the way from the eastern coast of Negros to Leyte; eastern, northern, and southern coasts of Mindanao.
*Language: [[Cebuano]], English, Filipino (Cebuanos in Leyte speak Waraynon)
 
{{quote|It has been said, by way of objection to a bill of rights....that in the Federal Government they are unnecessary, because the powers are enumerated, and it follows, that all that are not granted by the constitution are retained; that the constitution is a bill of powers, <strong>the great residuum being the rights of the people</strong>; and, therefore, a bill of rights cannot be so necessary as if the residuum was thrown into the hands of the Government. I admit that these arguments are not entirely without foundation, but they are not as conclusive to the extent it has been proposed. It is true the powers of the general government are circumscribed; they are directed to particular objects; but even if government keeps within those limits, it has certain discretionary powers with respect to the means, which may admit of abuse. Id.}}
=====Western Visayan=====
Western Visayans, or [[Hiligaynon people]]s are the fourth largest Filipino ethnic group. As with the rest of the Visayans, Spanish cultural influence was very strong here and many Hiligaynons, or Ilonggos as they call themselves, have strong Hispanic cultural characteristic; the Catholic Church, especially, remains a vital part of life here.
*Region: Coastal plains of Iloilo and Negros Occidental.
*Language: [[Hiligaynon]] (Ilonggo or Ilongo), Cebuano, Filipino, and English
=====Eastern Visayan=====
Eastern Visayans, or [[Waray people|Waray]]s are the sixth largest Filipino ethnic group. The Waray people's lands are one of the less developed parts of the country. Due to widespread poverty, many Warays work as servants in Manila for the upper class families.
*Region: Samar and eastern coast of Leyte, also in the southern tip of Luzon island.
*Language: [[Waray|Waraynon]], [[Cebuano]], Filipino, English
=====Southwestern Visayan=====
Southwestern Visayans, or [[Karay-a]]s are the seventeenth largest Filipino ethnic group. The name of their tribe was derived from the word "iraya", which means "upstream". Karay-as live mainly in the western half of the island of Panay, where mountain ranges predominate. They are also called Hantik, hence the name of their province, [[Antique province|Antique]]. Many of them have intermingled with the lowland Hiligaynons. They engage primarily in farming, fishing, and basketry. About half of the Karay-as are Catholics and the other half are Protestants.
*Region: Antique province
*Language: [[Kinaray-a]], Hiligaynon, Filipino, English
 
For the Founders, "rights" (against the actions of government) were always complementary to delegated powers of government, partitioning the space of public action. Each delimits its complement. Every constitutional "right" (or "immunity" to use [[Privileges and Immunities Clause|a term in Article Four of the Constitution]]) delimits its opposing power, and every delegated power delimits its opposing right.
=====Northwestern Visayans=====
Northwestern Visayans, or [[Aklanon people|Aklanon]]s are the sixteenth largest Filipino ethnic group. They live in the northern shores of the Panay island. Their language, Aklanon, is mutually comprehensible with Ilonggo, albeit with minor difficulties. Like the Western Visayans, they are Roman Catholics.
*Region: Aklan province
*Language: [[Aklanon]], Hiligaynon, Filipino, English
=====Other Visayan=====
Other minor groupings considered as Visayan are [[Masbatenyo]], [[Romblomanon]], [[Cuyonon]], and [[Marinduquenon]].
 
The First through Eighth Amendments address the means by which the federal government exercises its enumerated powers, while the Ninth Amendment addresses a "great residuum" of rights that have not been "thrown into the hands of the government." The Ninth Amendment became part of the Constitution on December 15, 1791 upon ratification by three-fourths of the states.
====Ilocano====
[[Ilocano people|Ilocanos]] form the third largest Filipino ethnic group. The Ilocanos came to the Philippines through ''bilogs'' or ''virays'', meaning boat. Aside from being referred to as Ilocanos, from "i"-from, and "looc"-bay, they also refer to themselves as Samtoy, from the Ilocano phrase "sao mi ditoy", meaning 'from our language'. Ilocanos are a migratory people. They have been the conquerors of the Cagayan Valley and the Pangasinan Valley during the 18th and the 19th centuries, and Southern Mindanao, during the 20th century. They are characterized as being hardworking and frugal, and they engage primarily in farming and fishing. In [[1572]], when the Spanish explorer [[Juan de Salcedo]] conquered the Ilocos, he described the Ilocanos as being more barbarous than the Tagalogs. The Ilocanos have had commerce with the Chinese for a long time, being near to the Chinese mainland and to Taiwan. Many of them have Chinese blood, and to a lesser extent, Tingguian blood. Virtually all Ilocanos are Christians.
*Region: Ilocos Provinces, Abra, La Union, Cordillera Autonomous Region, Cagayan, Isabela, Nueva Vizcaya, Tarlac, Zambales, Aurora, Oriental Mindoro, and Sultan Kudarat provinces
*Language: [[Ilocano]], English and Filipino
 
====Bicolano==Interpretation==
[[Bicolano people|Bicolano]]s are the fifth largest Filipino ethnic group. They live in the southwest corner of Luzon. Bicolanos are famous in the archipelago for having a cuisine distinct from that of the other Filipino ethnic groups-''siling labuyo'', or red chillies often spice up the cuisine. In Camarines Norte, the Bicolanos have intermarried with the Tagalogs, and in Sorsogon, the Bicolanos have intermarried with the Eastern Visayans. They engage primarily in farming. Bicolanos profess the Christian faith.
*Region: Camarines Norte, Camarines Sur, Albay, Sorsogon, Masbate, and Catanduanes provinces.
*Language: [[Bicolano|Bicolano dialects]] (i.e., Albay Bicolano, Central Bicolano. Pandan Bicolano, etc.), Filipino, English (some also speak Waraynon)
 
The Ninth Amendment has generally been regarded by the courts as negating any expansion of governmental power on account of the enumeration of rights in the Constitution, but the Amendment has not been regarded as further limiting governmental power. The U.S. Supreme Court explained this, in ''[[United Public Workers v. Mitchell]]'' {{ussc|330|75|1947}}:
====Kapampangan====
[[Kapampangan people|Kapampangan]]s are the seventh largest Filipino ethnic group. They live near and around the plains of Central Luzon. There are many people of mixed Kapampangan and American descent in Pampanga due to the presence of the [[Clark Air Base]]. Kapampangans are Christians. The current president, [[Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo]], is of Kapampangan descent.
*Region: Pampanga, Tarlac, Nueva Ecija provinces
*Language: [[Kapampangan]], Filipino, English
 
{{quote|If granted power is found, necessarily the objection of invasion of those rights, reserved by the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, must fail.}}
====Pangasinense====
[[Pangasinense people|Pangasinense]]s are the eighth largest Filipino ethnic group. Anthropologically speaking, the Pangasinenses are mountain dwellers of the Cordilleras and are closely akin to the [[Igorots]]. Their language is a subdivision of the Benguet languages. The main difference is that Pangasinenses have had long commerce enough with the Sambals, another close tribe, and with the [[Igorot]]. Pangasinenses are Christians.
[[Image:Ph_pres_ramos.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Fidel Ramos, the first Pangasinense president]]
*Region: Western Pangasinan
*Language: [[Pangasinense]], [[Ilocano]], Filipino, English
 
Some jurists have asserted that the Ninth Amendment is relevant to interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Justice Arthur Goldberg (joined by Chief Justice Warren and Justice Brennan) expressed this view in a concurring opinion in the case of ''[[Griswold v. Connecticut]]'' (1965):
====Maguindanao====
[[Maguindanao]]s are the ninth largest Filipino ethnic group and the largest Filipino Muslim ethnic group. Their culture very much centered in the establishments of housing near waterways, and their primary mode of transportation is the ''banca''. Although Islamic in culture and form, the Maguindanaos still retain many aspects of the traditional culture. Most Maguindanaos have mixed Indonesian blood due to close contacts with Sulawesi and Sabah during the 14th century.
*Region: Maguindanao, Cotabato, and Sultan Kudarat provinces.
*Language: Magindanao, Cebuano, Hiligaynon, Arabic, Filipino
 
{{quote|[T]he Framers did not intend that the first eight amendments be construed to exhaust the basic and fundamental rights.... I do not mean to imply that the .... Ninth Amendment constitutes an independent source of rights protected from infringement by either the States or the Federal Government....While the Ninth Amendment - and indeed the entire Bill of Rights - originally concerned restrictions upon federal power, the subsequently enacted Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the States as well from abridging fundamental personal liberties. And, the Ninth Amendment, in indicating that not all such liberties are specifically mentioned in the first eight amendments, is surely relevant in showing the existence of other fundamental personal rights, now protected from state, as well as federal, infringement.}}
====Maranao====
[[Maranao]]s are the tenth largest Filipino ethnic group and the second largest Filipino Muslim ethnic group. Many Maranaos are characterized as having fair complexions, which can be explained by heavy admixtures of Arab blood. They are famous for their artworks, sophisticated weaving patterns, and various wooden and metal craft. The Maranao are not as fierce in their temperament as the other Filipino Muslim ethnic groups, but they also implement the use of Arabic in their educational system and call for the establishment of an independent Islamic state in Mindanao, called [[Bangsamoro]]. They are very rich in culture, and royalty is held in high regard among themselves. The Maranaos were never subdued until the 1900s.
*Region: Lanao del Sur
*Language: Maranao, Cebuano, Arabic, Filipino
 
Subsequent to ''Griswold'', some judges have tried to use the Ninth Amendment to justify judicially enforcing rights that are not enumerated. For example, the District Court that heard the case of ''[[Roe v. Wade]]'' ruled that the Ninth Amendment protected a limited right to abortion.<ref>[http://hometown.aol.com/abtrbng/roedist.htm Roe v. Wade], 314 F. Supp. 1217 (1970).</ref> However, Justice William O. Douglas rejected that view; Douglas wrote that, "The Ninth Amendment obviously does not create federally enforceable rights." See ''[[Doe v. Bolton]]'' (1973).
====Tausug====
[[Tausug]]s, or Suluks, as they are called in Malaysia, are the eleventh largest Filipino ethnic group and the largest Filipino Muslim ethnic group. The name "tausug" comes from the word "sulu", which means 'people of the current'. Linguistically affiliated with the Visayans, their culture indicates otherwise. During the 14th century, their ancestors, who were in fact, Visayans by race, came from Northeastern Mindanao to their present locations, due to the proliferation of the Chinese trade in the area. The Chinese trade was so successful, that up to the present age, many Tausugs still have Chinese blood, and their royalty are also part-Chinese.
*Region: Sulu archipelago.
*Language: Tausug, Cebuano, [[Arabic]], Bahasa Malaysian, Filipino
 
The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals stated as follows in ''[[Gibson v. Matthews]]'', 926 F.2d 532, 537 (6th Cir. 1991):
====Cordillerano====
[[Taiwanese Aborigines|Formosan]], (in Filipino, ''Pormoso''): the ancestors of today's Ivatans, the Taiwanese aboriginal seafarers, came to the Philippines much later than those of the mainstream Filipinos. They speak a language unrelated to Philippine linguistic groups and are slightly different in physiognomy. Their homeland, the Batanes archipelago, has a temperate climate, which explains their difference in stature, physiognomy, and culture. They are closer to the Formosans, or [[Taiwanese Aborigines]], rather than to the mainstream Filipinos. The Y'Ami, inhabitants of [[Orchid Island]] of Taiwan, is their closest relative.
*Region: [[Batanes]] and [[Babuyan]] Archipelago
*Language: Ivatan (or Ibatan/Itbayaten), Ilocano, English, Filipino
 
{{quote|[T]he ninth amendment does not confer substantive rights in addition to those conferred by other portions of our governing law. The ninth amendment was added to the Bill of Rights to ensure that the maxim [[Statutory interpretation#Canons of Statutory Interpretation|expressio unius est exclusio alterius]] would not be used at a later time to deny fundamental rights merely because they were not specifically enumerated in the Constitution.}}
==Filipino-Mestizo==
[[Filipino Mestizo|Mestizos]], (in Filipino, ''Mestiso'' or ''Mistiso''): Filipinos of mixed ancestry. They form a tiny (2% to 3%) but economically and politically important minority. Mestizos in the Philippines may be of any race combination or ratio. A recent [http://hpgl.stanford.edu/publications/AJHG_2001_v68_p432.pdf genetic study] by [[Stanford University]], however, indicates that 3.6% of the population has at least some European ancestry.
 
Professor Laurence Tribe shares this view: "It is a common error, but an error nonetheless, to talk of 'ninth amendment rights.' The ninth amendment is not a source of rights as such; it is simply a rule about how to read the Constitution."<ref>Laurence H. Tribe, ''American Constitutional Law'' 776 n. 14 (2nd ed. 1998).</ref> Likewise, Justice Antonin Scalia has expressed the same view, in ''[[Troxel v. Granville]]'' (2000):
===European-Filipino===
====Spanish-Filipino====
[[Image:pilita.jpg|thumb|120px|Pilita Corrales,a Spanish-Filipino singer]]''[[Filipino Mestizo|Spanish-Filipino]]'', (in Filipino, ''Mistisong Kastila'' or ''Kastilaloy''): a combination of Filipino with either [[Spain|Spanish]], [[Basque]], or [[Mexican]]. Their features are distinguished by aquiline nose structures, light to dark hair, generally lighter skinned peoples with olive to light brown complexions, and somewhat taller than the average unmixed Filipino. Spanish-mestizos speak Filipino, though English is their primary language. Some, particularly those of the older generation have preserved Spanish as the spoken language of the home. They constitute the great majority of both upper, middle class and rarely intermingle with those outside their ethnic group. A great majority are either in politics or high-ranking executives of commerce and industry. Many can be found in the entertainment industry. Most elite 'Filipino' family dynasties, political families, and the elite clans are Spanish-mestizo. Many Spanish-mestizos and Spaniards living in the Philippine emigrated to either the United States or Spain following [[World War II]] and during the Marcos regime.
*Region: Makati City, Alabang district of Muntinlupa City, Cebu City, Iloilo City, Zamboanga City
*Language: English, Filipino, other Philippine dialects
 
{{quote|The Declaration of Independence...is not a legal prescription conferring powers upon the courts; and the Constitution’s refusal to 'deny or disparage' other rights is far removed from affirming any one of them, and even farther removed from authorizing judges to identify what they might be, and to enforce the judges’ list against laws duly enacted by the people.}}
===Asian-Filipino===
====Chinese-Filipino====
[[Image:CardinalSin.jpg|thumb|100px|left|Jaime Cardinal Sin, a Chinese-Filipino priest]]
''[[Chinese-Filipino]]'', (in Filipino, ''Mistisong Intsik'' or ''Tsinoy''): a combination of Filipino and Chinese. In general, a person is considered as a Chinese mestizo when he has a traceable direct Chinese ancestor. They are usually light yellowish skinned peoples who possess some epicanthic folds and some pads of fat in their cheekbones, much like Chinese faces. These groups, are successful and prosperous business people. They form part of both the upper, middle and lower classes. Some are also in the entertainment industry. Their primary languages are English, Chinese and Filipino. They number just over 1 million and are most concentrated in Manila (Binondo) and [[Angeles City]] in Pampanga province. The Chinese-Mestizos are more closer, in terms of culture, to the Filipinos than to the Chinese.
*Region: Metro Manila, Bacolod City, Angeles City, Vigan City, Lucena City, Cebu City
*Language: Filipino, Min Nan, Mandarin, English, other Philippine dialects
 
In the year 2000, the Harvard historian [[Bernard Bailyn]] gave a speech at the White House on the subject of the Ninth Amendment. He stated that the rights referred to in the Ninth Amendment are rights that may be "enacted into law." Here is how Dr. Bailyn interpreted the Ninth Amendment:<ref>Bernard Bailyn, [http://clinton2.nara.gov/Initiatives/Millennium/bbailyn.html Remarks at White House Millennium Evening] (2000).</ref>
=====Japanese-Filipino=====
''[[Japanese Filipino|Japanese-Mestizo]]'', (in Filipino, ''Mistisong Hapon''): a combination of Filipino with Japanese or Okinawan. Many are descendants of the Japanese Catholics that fled Japan 300 years ago and are members of the lower class. Because of discrimination encountered, some fled to the mountains after [[World War II]] while many others changed their names in the attempts to assimilate. Many were also killed (c. 10,000 Japanese Mestizos and Japanese) while other were deported following [[World War II]] as an act of retaliation. Their sense of Japaneseness may take on extremes, some have completely lost their Japanese identity while others have "''returned''" to [[Japan]], the homeland of their forebears. There is also a number of contemporary Japanese-mestizos, not associated with the history of the earlier established ones, born either in the Philippines or Japan. These latter are the resultant of unions between Filipinos and recent Japanese immigrants to the Philippines or Japanese and immigrant Filipino workers in Japan. Most Japanese-mestizos speak tribal languages and Filipino. There are believed to be between 100,000 and 200,000 Japanese-mestizos in the country, but no accurate figure is currently available. Significant numbers reside in Davao, Laguna, Pampanga and Baguio. They may also be known as Japinos, although this term is considered derogatory by many.
*Region: Davao, San Pedro town in Laguna, Pampanga, Baguio, and Manila.
*Language: Filipino, English
 
{{quote|When the federal Constitution was written the wisest minds in America decided that there should be no national Bill of Rights, not merely because most of the state constitutions already contained some such protections, but, as Madison (who would later write the federal Bill of Rights) said, 'There is a great reason to fear that a positive declaration of some of the most essential rights could not be obtained in the requisite latitude.' In other words, the enumeration of rights by the federal government, the mere listing of them and defining them, would necessarily limit their scope. 'The rights of conscience in particular [he said], if submitted to public definition, would be narrowed more than they are likely ever to be by an assumed power.' The right solution, he and others then felt, was what is implied in the present 9th Amendment: that, in addition to the rights specified by the states, there is a universe of rights, possessed by the people latent rights, still to be evoked and enacted into law.
=====South Asian-Filipino=====
''[[South Asians in the Philippines|Indian-South Asian-Filipino]]'': also called "Bumbay" along with more recent South Asian immigrants (see below), or "Sepoy," their ancestors came with the British between [[1762]] and [[1764]] during the various Anglo-Spanish wars. When the British decided to make a tactical withdrawal, many of the Indian soldiers (Sepoy) mutinied and refused to leave. Virtually all had taken a Filipina bride (or soon did so). They settled in what is now [[Cainta]], [[Rizal]], just east of Metro Manila. The region in and around Cainta still has many Sepoy descendants.
 
But was this workable? In any given situation, someone would have to decide whether the rights that were claimed were valid, and that would leave the existence of rights to the mercy of personal and political opinion, and no one would be safe. Some rights a core body of rights protected against the powers of the federal government would have to be specified, and the residue somehow protected in general terms. This is the compromise that we have inherited from them and that we live with, and struggle with, and benefit from, every day of our lives: in the first eight amendments of the Constitution, a carefully worded list of specific rights protected from encroachment by the federal government, together with the belief that there are not only rights protected by the states but a reservoir of other, unenumerated rights that the people retain, which in time may be enacted into law.}}
===American-Filipino===
''[[Amerasian|American-Mestizo]]'', (in Filipino, ''Mistisong Amerikano''): a combination of Filipino and American (regardless of race). They are also known as [[Amerasian]]s. They can be found in the upper class, but also amongst the middle and lower classes as a result of the abandonment of their American fathers upon completion of military service and subsequent withdrawal of US forces. Their physiognomy and facial features are much like the Spanish-mestizos, for those whose American ancestry was Caucasian or Latino/Hispanic-American. The number of American-mestizos is thought to be between 20,000 and 30,000. Most speak Filipino and English. The majority are to be found in [[Angeles City]], which has the largest proportion of Amerasians in the Philippines. [http://www.time.com/time/asia/news/magazine/0,9754,106430,00.html]
[[Image:Sammilby.jpg|thumb|100px|right|Sam Milby, an American-Filipino actor]]
*Region: Angeles City, Olongapo City, and Metro Manila.
*Language: English, Filipino, other Philippine dialects
 
It is important, when discussing the history of the Bill of Rights, to note that the Supreme Court held in ''[[Barron v. Baltimore]]'' (1833) that it was enforceable by the federal courts only against the federal government, and not against the states. However, in 1868, the [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]] was adopted, in large part to overturn that precedent, and the Supreme Court has used that Amendment, together with enabling congressional legislation, to apply some, but not all, provisions of the Bill of Rights against the states through what is called [[selective incorporation]], thereby enabling a citizen to sue the citizen's own state in federal court (see [[sovereign immunity]]). Since 1938, when the Supreme Court wrote its famous [[footnote four]], the proper application of the Bill of Rights has been an increasingly contentious issue.
===Other Mestizos===
Other types of mestizos from unions of Filipinos with other nationalities may also exist, including such mixes as Filipino-British, Filipino-Arab, Filipino-Vietnamese, Filipino-Korean, Filipino-Italian, Filipino-Polish, Filipino-Israeli, Filipino-Canadian, Filipino-Dutch, among such others. Together they account for less than 25,000, but are nonetheless disproportionately over-represented in the entertainment industry.
 
[[Robert Bork]], sometimes styled an "[[originalism|originalist]]", has likened the Ninth Amendment to an inkblot. Bork argued in ''The Tempting of America'' that, while the amendment clearly had some meaning, its meaning is indeterminate; because the language is opaque, its meaning is as irretrievable as it would be had the words been covered by an inkblot. According to Bork, if another provision of the Constitution were covered by an actual inkblot, judges should not be permitted to make up what might be under the inkblot lest any judges twist the meaning to their own ends (cf. [[underdeterminacy]]).
==Foreign Ethnic Groups==
Foreign minorities in the Philippines are estimated to account for a combined 3% of the population. Some are recent immigrants and their Philippine-born children, but most (examples are the Chinese and the Spaniards) have long-spanning histories in the country as independent communities. Most have assimilated much of the mainstream ethnic Filipino culture, and harbor a shared loyalty to both their Filipino nationality and independent community identity and continuity.
 
[[originalism|Originalist]] [[Randy Barnett#Ninth Amendment|Randy Barnett has argued]] that the Ninth Amendment requires what he calls a [[presumption of liberty]]. Other originalists, such as Thomas B. McAffee, have argued that the Ninth Amendment protects the unenumerated "residuum" of rights which the federal government was never empowered to violate.<ref>Thomas B. McAffee, [http://www.stephankinsella.com/texts/mcaffee_federalism_ninth.pdf Federalism and the Protection of Rights: The Modern Ninth Amendment's Spreading Confusion], 1996 B.Y.U. Law Rev. 351</ref> Constitutional historian [[Jon Roland]] has argued,<ref>Jon Roland, [http://www.constitution.org/9ll/schol/pnur.htm Presumption of Nonauthority and Unenumerated Rights] (2006)</ref> that the Ninth Amendment included by reference all of the rights proposed by the state ratifying conventions, in addition to those enumerated in the first eight amendments.
===East Asians===
====Southern Chinese====
[[Filipino Chinese|Chinese]], (in Filipino, ''Intsik''): the Chinese are the most significant and the most numerous foreign minority in the Philippines. Although often regarded by Filipinos as outsiders or ''banyaga'', many attest to the claim that 50% of all Filipinos have some traces of Chinese blood in their veins. Although many Chinese are branded by some Filipinos as "elitists" and rich, there still exist poor Chinese, especially the Cantonese and recent immigrants. Up to this day, the Chinese have their hands on 75% on all daily business transactions, which has lead to resentment and envy by some native Filipinos. The Chinese generally have a remarkable cultural pride due to its long history. Although the Chinese has advocated endogamy within the Chinese population for years, there is a growing case of inter-marriage and assimilation.
=====Min Nan (Fukienese)=====
[[Image:Lucio_tan.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Lucio Tan, a Southern Chinese taipan]]
[[Min Nan]] (閩南人), (in Filipino, ''Hokienes''): the Min Nans, or more commonly called Fukienese or Amoy, comprise 90% of the Chinese population in the Philippines. The majority of Min Nans are rich, although there are some who live in delapidated apartments in Manila due to poverty. The Min Nans are the most ethnocentric of all Chinese groups, but also the most exogamous. The Min Nans established schools that teaches Chinese history and various aspects of Chinese education, such as their languages.
*Region: Metro Manila, as well as in other major Philippine cities
*Language: [[Lan-nang]] (Philippine variant of [[Min Nan]], Mandarin, Filipino, English, other Philippine dialects
 
[[Gun politics|Gun rights]] activists in recent decades have sometimes argued for a fundamental natural right to keep and bear arms that both predates the U.S. Constitution and is covered by the Constitution's Ninth Amendment; according to this viewpoint, the [[Second Amendment to the United States Constitution|Second Amendment]] protects only a pre-existing right to keep and bear arms.<ref>Nicholas Johnson, [http://www.guncite.com/journals/nj9th.html ''Beyond the Second Amendment: An Individual Right to Arms Viewed Through The Ninth Amendment''], 24 Rutgers L.J. 1, 64-67 (1992)</ref> In the related case of ''[[United States v. Lopez]]'', 514 U.S. 549 (1995), the Supreme Court held that while Congress has broad lawmaking authority under the Commerce Clause, it is not unlimited, and does not apply to something as far from commerce as carrying handguns.
=====Yueh (Cantonese)=====
Yueh]] (廣東人), (in Filipino, ''Kantones''): the Yuehs, or usually termed Cantonese, comprise about 9% of the Chinese population in the Philippines. Although many Cantonese are rich, many of them still reside in ghettoes. They are also looked down by the Min Nans because the Cantonese are one of the first Chinese groups to accept Western Rule and Assimilation.
*Region: Metro Manila
*Language: [[Standard Cantonese|Yueh]], [[Lan Nang]], Mandarin, Filipino, English, other Philippine dialects
====Korean====
[[Koreans in the Philippines|Koreans]] (한민족), (in Filipino, ''Koreyano''): they form the fourth largest foreign minority group in the Philippines. The Koreans in the country are overwhelmingly Protestants. Most in the working class are either missionaries or businessmen. A large number of these are presumed to be students.
*Region: Metro Manila (primarily in the cities of Pasig, Parañaque, Quezon, and Makati)
*Language: Korean, English
 
The Ninth Amendment bars denial of unenumerated rights if the denial is based on the ''enumeration of certain rights'' in the Constitution, but does not bar denial of unenumerated rights if the denial is based on the ''enumeration of certain powers'' in the Constitution. It is to that enumeration of powers that the courts have said we must look, in order to determine the extent of the unenumerated rights mentioned in the Ninth Amendment.<ref>[http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=CASE&court=US&vol=330&page=75 ''United Public Workers v. Mitchell'', 330 U.S. 75 (1947)]</ref>
====Japanese====
[[Japanese Filipino|Japanese and Okinawan]], (in Filipino, ''Hapones''): the Japanese people came to the Philippines during the 14th century. Many of them have either intermarried with the Filipinos or are deported back to [[Japan]]. Exiled Japanese Christians, led by the Christian Samurai [[Dom Justo Takayama|Takayama Ukon]], settled in [[Dilao]], Paco in 1614 during the Spanish colonial period. However, suspicions of the Spaniards regarding the pure Japanese led to their expulsion just before the British occupied Manila. The present unmixed Japanese population are mostly expatriates doing business in the Philippines. A large number in the order of tens of thousands have settled in Davao City. After the war, a great majority of Japanese changed their names to typical Filipino names.
*Region: Metro Manila, Laguna, Angeles City, Olongapo City, Davao City
*Language: Japanese (or Okinawan), English
====Indonesian====
[[Indonesians in the Philippines|Indonesian]]s, (in Filipino, ''Indones''): most Indonesians in the Philippines are of Javanese descent. Indonesians are often stereotyped as 'terrorists', although the vast majority of them are people with good intentions who came to the Philippines to contribute to the enrichment of Islam in the country. Some are also students, but many enter illegally. Also included in the Indonesian cateogory are the Sangir, situated in the Sarangani islands. The Sangir are descendants of those members of Sulawesi tribes from Sangihe island who have ventured far into the Davao Gulf and have stayed there.
*Region: Concentrated mostly in the southern part of Mindanao
*Language: Javanese (or Sangir), various southern Philippine dialects, Arabic, Bahasa Indonesian
====Malaysians====
[[Malaysian]]s, (in Filipino, ''Malayo''): Most Malaysians residing in the Philippines are business expatriates and live in exclusive clusters in Metro Manila. Bornean Malaysians, which pertain to persons from any tribe in the Malaysian state of [[Sabah]] are widespread in southern Mindanao and in the Sulu Archipelago. Many Bornean Malaysians have completely resided in the Philippines, such is the case of the [[Badjao]] tribe, originally a tribe from Sabah, who has permanently settled in the waters of the Philippines.
====Vietnamese====
[[Vietnamese]], (in Filipino, ''Biyetnamito''): the Vietnamese in the Philippines fall under two general categories: those who married American military personnel during the [[Vietnam War]] and were provided safe lodging and transport in the Philippines, or those who are part of the thousand or more Vietnam Boat Refugees. Inasmuch as many American military personnel in the Philippines have brought their Vietnamese wives and their children with them, some have stayed and have integrated into the Filipino culture. In the case of the boat refugees, many are also granted safe pass to the [[United States]], but those who declined were put into refugee centers. Most of them are well-integrated into the Filipino community as well. Tensions between the Filipinos and Vietnamese escalated on March 1996, when the Philippines allegedly started deportation by force. Repatriation was hindered through the interference of the Roman Catholic Church. On March 2005, a petition was approved by the Canadian government to give shelter to the remaining Vietnamese Boat People in the Philippines.
*Region: Vietville in northern Palawan province and in Bataan province
*Language: Southern Vietnamese, English
 
===Americans=Footnotes==
<references />
[[Americans in the Philippines|Americans]], (in Filipino, ''Amerikano''): the Americans are the second largest foreign minority in the Philippines. The Americans who settled in the Philippines are overwhelmingly White, but there are also few Blacks who have intermarried with the Filipinos. Most of them are either resident businessmen, expatriate businessmen, or missionaries. They number 110,000 in Manila alone, excluding temporary embassy officials and U.S. Military personnel.
*Region: Metro Manila, Angeles City, Olongapo City, Baguio City
*Language: English
 
===SouthExternal Asians=links==
* [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=953008 A Textual-Historical Theory of the Ninth Amendment] by Kurt Lash (2007)
[[South Asians in the Philippines|South Asian]]s, (in Filipino, ''Bumbay''): though in Filipino they are called ''Bumbay'' (from [[Bombay]], modern-day [[Mumbai]], [[India]]), they may be either [[India]]n or [[Pakistan]]i. They collectively form the third largest foreign minoritty in the Philippines. They are mainly [[Sindhi]], [[Punjabi]], and [[Marathi]], and are mostly merchants and belong primarily to the middle class. There are approximately 30,000 of them, and half of them are Sindhis who left India after the British partitioned India and the other half are the [[Sikhs]] whom many of whom have traditionally been rural money-lenders. The Sindhi businessmen are often part of Manila&#8217;s rich elite. Most speak Filipino, [[Punjabi language|Punjabi]] or [[Sindhi language|Sindhi]], and [[English language|English]]. The Marathi who live in the Philippines are overwhelmingly Roman Catholic clergymen and women who are taking advaned studies in the Philippines. Most Marathis are natives of [[Goa]].
* [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=789384 The Ninth Amendment: It Means What It Says] by [[Randy Barnett]] (2006)
*Region: Metro Manila
* [http://www.law.cornell.edu/anncon/html/amdt9toc_user.html CRS Annotated Constitution: 9th Amendment] by the [[Congressional Research Service]] (2000)
*Language: Sindhi (or Punjabi/Marathi)), Filipino, English
* [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=613621 The Lost Original Meaning of the Ninth Amendment] by Kurt Lash (2004)
* [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=615701 The Lost Jurisprudence of the Ninth Amendment] by Kurt Lash (2005)
* [http://freemarketnews.com/Analysis/117/3116/2005-12-07a.asp?wid=117&nid=3116 Rights, the Constitution, and the Ninth Amendment] by [[Tibor R. Machan]] (2005)
* [http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/bill_of_rightss11.html Proposed Amendments to the Constitution] by [[James Madison]] (1789)
* [http://www.stephankinsella.com/texts/mcaffee_federalism_ninth.pdf Federalism and the Protection of Rights: The Modern Ninth Amendment’s Spreading Confusion] by Thomas B. McAfee (1996)
* [http://www.constitution.org/dhbr.htm Documentary History of the Bill of Rights] -- Compilation of documents
 
{{US Constitution}}
===Europeans===
====Spaniards====
[[Spaniards in the Philippines|Spaniard]]s (Español), (in Filipino, ''Kastila''): there are approximately 17,000 descendants of Spanish colonists living in the Philippines, 7,000 of those are [[Basques]]. The majority are integrated into the Spanish-mestizo upper levels of Filipino society.
*Region: Makati City and Alabang district of Muntinlupa City.
*Language: Spanish, English, Filipino, other Philippine dialects
====Other Europeans====
Aside from Spaniards who are tallied separately above, there are other recent European immigrants who have settled, as well as a few who have arrived since the 16th century. Among them, the largest nationalities accounted for are Britons, Italians, Portuguese, Dutch, Belgians, Polish, German, and French. They are for the most part, businessmen and businesswomen. A few are also missionaries.
*Region: Metro Manila, Baguio City, Benguet, and Cavite
*Language: Various European languages, English
 
[[Category:1791 in law]]
===West Asians===
[[Category:Amendments to the United States Constitution|09]]
[[Arabs in the Philippines|Arabs]], (in Filipino, ''Arabo''): there are approximately 31,000 Arabs in the Philippines and they speak Arabic and Tagalog. Among these are both Christian and Muslim Arabs. Among the Muslim Arabs, many have intermixed and been thoroughly integrated and assimilated into the Filipino Muslim community. The royal family of the Sultanates of [[Sultanate of Sulu|Sulu]] has long claimed through a family line, or ''tarsila'', their descendance from the prophet [[Muhammad]].
[[Image:Umakhouny.jpg|thumb|100px|right|Uma Khouny, an Israelite-Filipino actor]]
*Region: Metro Manila, Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao
*Language: Arabic dialects (mostly Levantine Arabic and Standard Arabic), Mindanaoan dialects, many Arabs can speak French and/or Malaysian and Indonesian
====Other West Asians====
Although Arabs form the majority of West Asians in the [[Philippines]]. Jews and Turkish also form a minority in the country.
 
[[de:9. Zusatzartikel zur Verfassung der Vereinigten Staaten]]
== Notes ==
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[[Category:Ethnic groups in the Philippines| ]]
 
this info is not reliable