The answer is to have sex+
smoke weed
BECAUSE YES
Thirty-nine delegates actually signed the Constitution. There were 55 delegates at the convention, but only 39 people actually showed up and signed.
Under Article VII (seven) Ratification.
George Washington, John Blair and James Madison.
Nathaniel Gorham and Rufus King signed the Constitution. Elbridge Gerry and Caleb Strong, also delegates from Massachusetts, abstained from signing.
Three--Randolph and Mason, of Virginia, and Gerry, of Massachusetts--refused to sign.
bob
Eleven states ratified the US Constitution in 1788. They were: Georgia on January 2, 1788 Connecticut on January 9, 1788 Massachusetts on February 6, 1788 Maryland on April 28, 1788 South Carolina on May 23, 1788 New Hampshire on June 21, 1788 Virginian on June 26, 1788 New York on July 27, 1788
Robert Nathan, Bristol PA what do I need to answer?
The names of some prominent counterintelligence agencies are FBI which means Federal Bureau investigation. Which is a goverment agency that is secret from the public for some stuff.
Differing views on these questions brought into existence two parties, the Federalists, who favored a strong central government, and the Antifederalists, who preferred a loose association of separate states. Impassioned arguments on both sides were voiced by the press, the legislatures, and the state conventions. In Virginia, the Antifederalists attacked the proposed new government by challenging the opening phrase of the Constitution: "We the People of the United States." Without using the individual state names in the Constitution, the delegates argued, the states would not retain their separate rights or powers. Virginia Antifederalists were led by Patrick Henry, who became the chief spokesman for back-country farmers who feared the powers of the new central government. Wavering delegates were persuaded by a proposal that the Virginia convention recommend a bill of rights, and Antifederalists joined with the Federalists to ratify the Constitution on June 25.