Debate And Dissent In Saul Cornell's The Other Founders

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In The Other Founders, Saul Cornell examines the history of debate and dissent in the forming of the United States government. In making his argument, Cornell points out that Anti-Federalist thought was not just a single line of reasoning that can be individualized into one basic theme. Instead, the author notes that the views of the Anti-federalists were as varied as the people who held them. Instead of simply being for “states rights,” as many historians have asserted, Anti-federalists expressed concerns about courts, juries, the rights of the people, the use of the “public sphere” in political debates, and whether the framers had devised a truly federal government or an all-powerful national one. All of these issues all ran through the

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