Amid a climate of tightening restrictions, mandates, and dwindling freedoms, U.S. Constitution focus groups have formed to sort through much of what has gone unchallenged until last year, when a growing number of people began asking if what the government is doing is legal. As the U.S. Constitution has been reinterpreted over time, the teaching of it has diminished in the classroom, leaving the average person having little understanding of how it applies to one’s own rights. Though the initial document was written for “We the People,” today it seems only experts are able to untangle the legal knots surrounding our liberties. North Carolina Citizens for Constitutional Rights That’s where Matthew Ceradini, with Ceradini Law in Raleigh, North Carolina, comes in. He represents the North Carolina Citizens for Constitutional Rights, an organization formed in February. “We believe in ‘We the People’ over political agendas because it’s the political agendas of …