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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8 page paper analyzes Alexander Hamilton's Federalist Paper number 22. Each theme is discussed in full and then applied to the creation of various laws which are still in effect today. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MBhamfed.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
aimed at them. The states were, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Virginia, and New York (Frohnan, 1998). The problem was that most of these states had already declared themselves somewhat, nations unto themselves.
They did not particularly see the need to be unified. Many had already set their own rules and regulations into practice by charging port taxes and other import taxes from
neighboring states(Frohnan, 1998). The need to regulate and standardize trade between the nations was at the heart of Hamiltons Federalist Papers No#22. Hamilton, Madison and John Jay wrote the
Federalist Papers, which were to appear a majority of the week in the newspapers of the day. Their plan was to saturate the areas that were of the most concern
and try to persuade them into forming a union of states. Those newspaper articles became the Federalist Papers. Therefore, it can be stated, because much of what they wrote in
the papers was based on their recordings of the minutes from the Continental Congress, that the Federalist papers were the single greatest interpretive source of the Constitution of the United
States, and to this day still are able to give insight as the intent of the original organizers of the United States Constitution. The Articles of Confederation were of major
concern to Hamilton and in this paper he addresses a few of what he considers to be some of the more glaring inconsistencies. Those were: problems dealing with commerce, military,
courts, representation, and the ratification of the Articles of Confederation(Articles of Conf.22, 2003). In this paper, the differences between two points of view can be seen in Hamiltons defense
of his ideas against those of Madisons. Both men did seem to agree that the idea of democracy had been taken to the extreme in some of the Northern states
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