This is an important issue! Since most of them were from the North, they generally didn't care for it. Before Madison went democratic-republican, he felt that Slavery was an awful thing and would taint the nation in world view. It was the republican south that really wanted slavery.
they want the power to go to the national government, but i need to know about their view on slavery is.
Two views of bank which are Federalists: believe a strong banking system was necessary to develop healthy industries and trade and Anti-Federalists: supported a decentralized banking system where the states would establish and regulate all banks within their borders.
Abraham Lincoln was raised by his father who was a strict Baptist and did not believe in slavery. His views and the encounters Lincoln had with slaves themselves influenced his views on slavery.
the north's views on slavery were ngative and they wanted it abolished. that is why slaves went to the north when they ran away.
Northern viewsA vocal minority of northern were abolitionists or people who wanted to end slavery.Southern viewsMany wanted to keep slavery no matter how bad the slaves felt about it .
That freedom is a human right.
Slavery
States' powers were being threatened in their views
He was in favor of a strong state's rights.
they had an argument because there was no Bill of Rights and also the executive branch held too much power.
Wanted important political powers to remain with states
The anti-federalists were in favor of the Articles of Confederation as the law for the new government. If the Constitution was to be the law of the land, the anti=federalists insisted on a Bill of Rights.
The anti-Federalists or Democratic Republicans, They were not happy with the Constitution because it gave too much power to the federal government at the expense of the individual states. They also were afraid the federal government would trample on the rights of the people so they insisted on adding the Bill of Rights to it just so that it would be clear that the new federal government would not become a new monarchy that was just overthrown. The Federalists were thrilled with it.
Some causes of the Civil War are Lincoln becoming president and not wanting slavery in the states, tensions over states rights versus federal authority, and wesward expansion. President did not want slavery, so when he became president he was trying to abolish is. The southern states, which had major plantations, did not want to end slavery. 11 southen states declared their secession from the U.S. to make the Confederate states of America.
prison
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The origins of the Bill of Rights started during the debate over the ratification of the newly-written Constitution. The Federalists, under James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and John Jay supported a strong federal government, supporting the views that a powerful central government was necessary to keep a country together. The opposite view, the fear of a central government becoming too powerful, was championed by Thomas Jefferson and Patrick Henry. The Federalists backed up the Constitution because it upheld a strong federal government over state governments while the Anti-Federalists strongly opposed this in favor of states' rights. To encourage ratification, Madison, Hamilton and Jay wrote the Federalist Papers outlining their views on the idea of a strong central government. Eventually, the Federalists won out and the Constitution was ratified, but only after the Federalists provided certain provisions that protected individual freedoms and state sovereignty. The Bill of Rights are collectively the first ten amendments of the Constitution, a reassurance to the state-rightists in the guarantee of individual freedoms, the limit of government power and the reservation of power to the states and public. As an aside, Madison presented 12 "rights" that were rejected by the convention.
Two views of bank which are Federalists: believe a strong banking system was necessary to develop healthy industries and trade and Anti-Federalists: supported a decentralized banking system where the states would establish and regulate all banks within their borders.