Sunday, March 8, 2020
United States Constitution essays
United States Constitution essays    The Constitution Right from the beginning of its creation the constitution of the United     States has been a shaky document. The very basis for it being there was in fact illegal. The     story of American politics starts with the Declaration of Independence. This document     was brilliantly written by Thomas Jefferson and compacted all of the great ideas of     enlightenment into one short easy to read paper. The declaration stated all of the ideals the     new American nation would strive for. A constitution was needed as a way in which to     fulfill those goals. The articles of confederacy were created as that constitution. However,     they were weak, because no state wanted to give away any of their powers, and so the     articles eventually failed. That is when the modern day constitution was starting to form.     The Articles of Confederacy stated that in order to change any part of the document all     thirteen states must agree to the change. Therefor a meeting was called so that they could     amend the failing articles. However, representatives from two of the states did not show     up. Even though not all states were represented the meeting started and the  first vote was     to totally throw away the Articles of Confederacy. The constitution wasnt formed yet and     it was already a flawed document. Because not all states were represented when the     articles required it, the constitution was an illegal document. The delegates working on the     constitution new that they needed a stronger document, because the articles proved too     weak, but it still needed to please all of the states. This was impossible. So what ended up     happening was the new document became more and more vague. The only way to create a     document that would pass was to make a document which didnt really solve any     problems but make each state believe that there problems would be fixed. This was     accomplished by making it so that it was too vague to offend ...     
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