The Genius of the American Constitution

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“When people fear the government, there is tyranny. When the government fears the people, there is liberty.” By 1787, the enlightened statesmen began to understand and accept the flaws of the Articles of Confederation. It was too weak and did not allow the new nation’s economy to thrive. The system under these articles failed to create a strong central government and even lacked a court system. One major weakness of the central government was that they could not tax the states and this lead to an uneven distribution of power, and the states became overwhelmingly powerful. The challenge was to write a new constitution that was strong enough to hold the country and states together, secure the rights of the people, and not allow a single person, or a group of people to become tyrants. So when the fifty five representatives meet in Philadelphia during May of 1787 to amend the articles, they instead created a new and revolutionary government that was strong, powerful and protected the people against tyranny. The constitution guarded against tyranny by the separation of powers, a system of checks and balances, and by establishing federalism.

The problem of tyranny can exist even within a democracy when “The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many…may be justly pronounced the very definition of tyranny.” The Constitution called for a separation of powers, and federalists, such as James Madison claimed that, “Liberty requires that the three great departments of power should be separate and distinct.” The separation of power, which would be a major protector against tyranny called for three branches, the legislative, executive, and judiciary. These branches...

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... the Articles of confederation the United States would not have been able to thrive because of the weak central government and state tyrants. Under the constitution, separation of powers, governmental checks and balances, and Federalism proved to make the nation stronger and more united than ever while eliminating any form of tyranny. No one party or branch of government could over throw another and only the people had the power to over throw the government if their rights were being threatened. The constitution to this day protects the people when the government tries to impede on public rights. Examples of this are the recent S.O.P.A and P.I.P.A internet bills that failed to pass because of public outrage and were considered unconstitutional. The guards that the constitution put on tyranny still hold true today and will hold on fast for centuries to come.

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