Articles of Confederation


It would have been very difficult to run an effective government under
the Articles of Confederation.   Many of the great minds politically active after
the American Revolution realized this; thus arrived the birth of one of the
greatest political documents of all time: The Constitution.   With the implement
of the Constitution, the United States government became effective.
The product of some of the greatest minds to ever exist in this world,
the Articles did have some positive effects on society.   It successfully put an
end to the Revolutionary War, it negotiated a favorable end to the war in the
Treaty of Paris, and created a model for the admission of new territories
courtesy of the Northwest Ordinance.   Nonetheless, it was much too weak to give
the new nation the necessary foundation on which the growth of society could be
started from.
For one thing, any amendment of the Articles required a unanimous vote
throughout the colonies.   Since this was almost impossible, there always being
two sides to everything [a pro and a con], changing the Articles to eliminate
the ideas that did not function properly was near impossible.   Another factor of
the Articles' ineffectiveness was that Congress was in essence tied in its
authority.   After the war, the colonists trusted no ultimate authority; not even
one they designed.   It could not regulate commerce, so what resulted was
thirteen colonies with different taxations and tariff laws.   This only added to
the already present feelings of dislike and distrust which had existed between
the colonies since they were first established.
After this period of eight years, the "Critical Period", the light at
the end of the tunnel arrived with Thomas Jefferson writing the Constitution.
It delegated the power, at the discretion of the people.   It was designed to be
amended; the great minds who designed it realized that they themselves were not
infallible, and could make mistakes.   The beauty of the... [continues]

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