Wednesday, May 29, 2019
U.S. Constitution :: essays research papers
     The document I chose to write about is the United States typography. When the thirteen British colonies in North America declared their independence in 1776, they laid down that governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. The colonies had to establish a government, which would be the framework for the United States. The purpose of a compose constitution is to define and therefore much specifically limit government powers. After the Articles of Confederation failed to work in the 13 colonies, the U.S. Constitution was created in 1787.     The Constitution is important because it was expressly designed to limit powers into three co-ordinate outgrowthes, the legislative, executive, and judiciary branch none of which was to have supremacy over the others. This separation of powers with the checks and balances which each branch was given over the others was designed to prevent any bra nch, from infringing individual liberties safeguarded by the Constitution. I think the U.S. Constitution was a way for the U.S. to establish government which was a negotiation between the two former governments, a monarchy and total state power. I think by creating the checks and balances, peoples rightfulnesss would be safer and they would feel more secure not having one branch of government with absolute power. What I found most interesting about the Constitution was how complex and detailed the framers make it, to effectively explain and limit the individual branches of power in government. In the words of Thomas Paine, "a government without a constitution is power without right". Meaning that for power to be granted, it is necessary to establish a constitution.     The Federalist Papers 10 & 51 were essays which helped persuade the citizens of the United States to vote for the federal Constitution. throng Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay used pseudonyms as their names to convince the public. Those who were skeptical of voting for a government, which had many different major powers, were reassured by the understructure fathers in their speeches and conventions throughout the U.S.     The importance of Constitution, both in its content and its status, is little appreciated by the general public.
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