"To check the local governments and to control the extensive territory of these United States, the proposed constitution establishes a government whose consolidated powers will eventually swallow up the state legislatures. In a republic of such vast extent, the representatives of the people will soon lose touch with their constituents, becoming an aristocracy detached from the concerns of the common citizen. Without an explicit declaration of rights to shield the individual from the overreach of this new federal head, we are asked to exchange a system of liberty for one of potential tyranny."
—Adapted from an essay by an anonymous writer signing as "Cincinnatus," 1787
Which of the following arguments from the ratification debates is most directly supported by the excerpt?
- The new federal government under the Constitution would become too centralized and distant, threatening local self-governance and individual freedoms.Cevap
- BThe Articles of Confederation had successfully resolved national debt issues by granting the confederation congress the power of direct taxation.
- CThe Federalist political faction argued that ratification should be opposed because it gave too much power to state legislatures.
- DThe immediate ratification of the Constitution was necessary to prevent the British Parliament from imposing new colonial taxes on trade.