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US government and civics
Course: US government and civics > Unit 7
Lesson 1: Why it matters- Sal Khan & John Dickerson: introduction
- Why study US history, government, and civics?
- Why do midterm congressional elections matter?
- Why does your vote matter?
- How does voter turnout in midterms compare to presidential elections?
- Does the president's party usually gain or lose seats at the midterm elections?
- Who is the Speaker of the House?
- Why is the Speaker of the House second in succession to the President?
- What was the Articles of Confederation?
- What was the Gilded Age?
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What was the Articles of Confederation?
The Articles of Confederation, America's first governing document, allowed states to act like independent islands, leading to chaos. Problems included inconsistent currency and difficulties in trade negotiations. The Constitution replaced it, balancing centralized control with state liberties, and introducing a presidency. Over time, the balance has shifted towards federal power.
Want to join the conversation?
- Why didn’t Rhode Island attend the Constitutional Convention?(5 votes)
- The decision to boycott the Constitutional Convention was entirely consistent with the colony/state's history, including its early opposition to the British Crown. Rhode Islanders simply rejected the notion of governance from outside their very limited borders, and did not want to give their imprimatur to the constitution that would emerge.
https://www.enotes.com/homework-help/why-didnt-rhode-island-send-representative-303648(12 votes)
- Do we have a democracy or republic yet?(2 votes)
- did federalists believe that the executive branch was too powerful in the new consitution?(4 votes)
- I believe so.(2 votes)
- Why are the Articles of Confederation so important?(4 votes)
- The Articles of Confederation are important as a demonstration of how NOT to try to organize a nation, and as an example that the USA tried that and found it wanting.(1 vote)
- Why didn’t Rhode Island attend the Constitutional Convention?(3 votes)
- Rhode Island was not even sure that it wanted to be part of the USA. It sent no delegates as a way of avoiding responsibility for the outcome of things. Now this, the smallest state in the USA (until Washington DC gains statehood) has as many US Senators as Texas, and more members of congress than Wyoming.(3 votes)
- why be afraid to take control(2 votes)
- Wasn't it, rather, a fear that someone else would take control? The Articles were there to codify the limitations of any strong sectors of society in the exercise of control.(3 votes)
- What is the magna carta in America?(2 votes)
- Tha Magna Carta was a British thing, not an American one.(3 votes)
- Why are the Articles of Confederation so important?(2 votes)
- The articles are important today (in the 21st century) as an example of the type of national organization that failed. If someone recommends organizing a town, a company or an international organization along those lines now, all an opponent needs to do is point out the failure of such a structure more than 200 years ago.(2 votes)
- i wonder if we have a democracy yet(1 vote)
- Not quite yet in 2022, but give it another hundred or so years.(4 votes)
- Do you think we have figured out how to balance the state rights or is that still a problem?(1 vote)
- This is perpetually a balancing act. The current (2021) state of laws regarding termination of pregnancy (abortion) is an excellent example of the struggle.(3 votes)
Video transcript
- So, John. People are always talking
about the Constitution. But, the Constitution was not the first founding
document of the United States. What were the Articles of Confederation, and why did they need to get replaced? - Well, the Articles of Confederation were the first loose set of rules to govern these 13 states, but they were a mess. Essentially, they allowed the states to be kind of their own
little sovereign islands. So, it was not a united nation. It was like an Archipelago of islands. And, the reason they were a mess. There's a couple of things. One, when they tried to repay the
Revolutionary War soldiers, Congress and Washington
with very little power, had to go to the states and say, please give us some money so
we can repay the soldiers. A lot of the states said, no thank you. We're not going to do that. Then if you had a river that rolled through
several different states, and you wanted to have a trade agreement with the Spanish, for example, to use that river and trade along it, then the government didn't have one way to negotiate with the Spanish. Individual states had to do it, and individual states
had different interests. Some wanted to trade with the Spanish. Some didn't want to trade at all. And so, how do you get those
states to agree on something? There was also not universal coinage. The states all made their
own money and differently. Well, states might print a bunch of money in order to payoff some debts, and then the money in one state is worth less than the money in another, who regulates all of that? So, commerce, and
industry, and self-defense. There was no way to raise
an army an pay for it. So, the nation was
crumbling before they got to Philadelphia in 1787. - And to your point, in most countries the parts of the country are called things like provinces, but ours are states, because they view themselves
as individual countries. - Absolutely, and because of course, the
Articles of Confederation had been formed in the wake of this fear, and the experience of
the fear of a monarchy. So, they wanted personal liberty, and get the monarchy and national control, throw it all away, because they believe that
once you consolidate control, in a national government of any kind, that it would trample liberty. And so, after having fought a revolution for the purposes of liberating the people, you're not gonna design a government that then stomps down on that liberty. So, they created something
that gave the states lots of flexibility, and then that flexibility
allowed everybody to go off in their different directions. - So, Articles of Confederation, maybe too much independence for the individual states. So, it seems like there
was a consensus to fix it. What was the central debate when they decided to fix it? - Well, there was a
consensus it had to be fixed, but when they got to Philadelphia. First of all, Rhode Island was invited and said no thank you, so 12 of the 13 states showed up. And, they knew they wanted
to centralize things. But, what did that mean? And, did it mean one president,
or a council of presidents? Did it mean a strong Congress? How strong? Could they tell states what to do? Well, if they did that then they were acting just
like George III had acted. So, they had to iron
out all of these issues to bring enough central control, and enough quick movement of government, that it could address national problems, but not so much that it trampled and stomped on that liberty. And, that was the constant debate. Constantly trying to figure out how to keep the balance between giving enough national power, but enough liberty. And that, some of the
biggest fights included fights over slavery, North versus South, fights over big states
versus small states. Who has representation in
this national government, and how do you figure that out? And then of course, the question of do we want a president? Will it be a single person, and how the dickens do
we elect that person? Which led us to the Electoral College, which has had some bumpy history. - And, where do you think we ended up? If on a scale of zero to 10. If was zero was a complete,
you know, independent states, and 10 is a federal government that just controls everything. Where do you think the US Constitution ended up relative to the
Articles of Confederation? - Well, in September of 1787, when it gets September 17th, 1787. When the new Constitution gets voted on, it is a stronger national document that has basically three main parts. One, the people are at the
heart and center of it. It is the people who
are the representatives, or at the center of the
republican government. The second thing is that
the national government can tell states what to
do in some instances. Those instances are
circumscribed, but it can happen. The states have to fall in line. That was very new, and there is this thing called a presidency which is created. Single person, created really in the
mold of George Washington. So, it is a nationalized government, but with a strong
attention to this question of protecting liberty through
a balance of power system, so that both the national government has checks and balances, and also the relationship between the federal government
and the state government has a number of checks and balances. So, even though they went in
a more centralized direction, they were constantly attentive
to this idea of liberty, keeping it free in the states, and not messing with them too much in their effort to get some
kind of centralized control. - So, it sounds like they might have gone from a one or a two with the
Articles of Confederation, to maybe a seven? Six? - Well, they went, I think they went from a one or two to maybe a five or a six, which has now moved. - Over time. - Over time, closer to maybe an eight or nine. - Fascinating.