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They didn't all want a decentralized government. Thomas Jefferson was probably the largest advocate for a non-centralized government, while John Adams and James Madison were part of what eventually became known as the Federalist party. That said, they all agreed that no one person should have anywhere near absolute power (e.g. A king).

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Federalism is known as State's Rights. It embodies the concept put in the Constitution by the founding fathers that each state was to be a strong and definite political body in and of itself. The states were to retain most authority to govern their own affairs without interference from the federal government. While we think of our modern America as a democracy, that was not the original intent of the founders. Their concept was for the states to be a group united together under the idea of a free republic. After the Constitutional Convention, when Benjamin Franklin was asked by a citizen what they had been given, he replied, "A republic, if you can keep it". A republic would have less of a central government with more power residing in the individual states.

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Q: Why did the founding fathers decide to form a federal government?
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They had all ready lived under monarchy and knew that is what they didn't want.


What did the civil war decide?

The power of the Federal Government versus States Rights and the issue of slavery.


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When the US Constitution was ratified by the states, the delegates wanted to insure that the new Federal government had limited powers. To ensure this all powers not delegated to the Federal government, all powers not assigned to the Federal government are powers left to each state to decide.


What does the federal government do?

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How Atomic energy should be used in peacetime and during a war.

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