"Articles of Confederation" Essays and Research Papers

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    Today in the United States of America trust in the government has taken one of the top spots in issues that are particularly important to its citizens. In a Gallup poll‚ it was reported that 81 percent of American’s hardly ever or never trust the government to do what is right with our country. The ironic aspect of this is the framers of our Constitution never intended for government to be trusted and felt that the Constitution needed to be built in order to accommodate the distrust that will inevitably

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    His proposition with the plan was to expand the government power over states‚ representation for states to be based on their populations and overall called for excessive change to the Articles of Confederation. “In England‚ at this day‚ if elections were open to all classes of people‚ the property of landed proprietors would be insecure.” James Madison expressed in Notes of the Secret Debates of the Federal Convention of 1787. He believed that

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    studied numerous subjects including history. After college‚ he returned home where he had a large interest in the rebellion against Britain. In 1779 Madison was elected into the Continental Congress. The Articles of Confederation were failing and James knew it. He began working hard studying the articles and devising plans to revise them to give the young nation a strong form of government. At the convention he took detailed notes and debated almost every issue. James Madison was a political genius

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    MidTerm Essay The Constitution divided the powers between the Federal‚State and Local governments in a very specific way. Which we now call Federalism‚but before this we had the Articles of Confederation.The reason we did not keep the Articles of Confederation was because it was to weak and gave too much power to the states. But it did set up a foundation which helped bring us the division of powers between Federal‚local and state governments. Federalism breaks down what National ‚ State

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    The purpose of the Constitution according to the Preamble The Preamble of the Constitution states the fundamental purposes‚ principles‚ and goals of the government established by the Constitution. The Preamble also outlines the Constitution and how it operates. It is basically a summary of the Constitution that states the purposes and intentions of the United States Government. The Constitution‚ According to the

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    new Constitution was drafted‚ the ratification‚ the official approval by the people of the United States‚ sparked a national debate. People were shocked by the radical changes it proposed; they expected the convention to merely amend the Articles of Confederation. They were afraid of regressing back into a state under tyranny‚ a form of rule where a single or small group reigns with vast or absolute power. Americans had just fought for their freedom from the tyrannical rule of the king of England

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    Influences on the Constitution The Constitution was adopted on September 17‚ 1787‚ by the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia‚ Pennsylvania‚ and ratified by conventions in eleven States. It went into effect on March 4‚ 1789. The historical influences behind the constitution included Aristotle‚ the Magna Carta‚ the writings of John Locke‚ and the English Bill of Rights from 1689. The Magna Carta was written in 1215. It was the first document to challenge the authority of the king‚

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    Federalists Advantages

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    This was also a great advantage because this meant that they had more time to think thoroughly about the Constitution‚ making people feel more encouraged. Lastly‚ there was a widespread feeling that the Articles of Confederation was a serious flaw. The controversy with the Articles was that each state had only one vote in Congress‚ and nine out of the thirteen states had to agree in order for it to be passed. The nation had a vast economic problem‚ Shay’s Rebellion was

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    The Ratification of the Constitution There were many arguments for and against the ratification of the Constitution of the United States. The people that wanted the Constitution to be ratified and people who opposed it were called federalists and anti-federalists. They would get into heated arguments whether or not the Constitution should be ratified. The worst thing about the Constitution is it has no Bill of Rights to protect the people’s rights. Though the Constitution doesn’t have a Bill

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    The United States of America Should Be Against Federalism Ratification of the Constitution is bad for America. The third principle of the Declaration of Independence is‚ “Governments are created in order to protect the rights of the people they govern.” Federalists ideas do not protect people. By supporting the federalism ideas the people of America will be governed by an overly powerful government that will not protect the rights of the average citizen. One example of this is the new Constitution

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