I have no earthly idea
It depends which country you are referring to.
The Founders thought that common good was better than individual rights. They thought that because common good helps more than a few people. They thought the government should serve the majority of the people. The Founders tried to make common good one of the main purposes in the 1700's. Some of the Founders like Patrick Henry feared a strong national government. They worried that a strong government would only serve certain groups and couldn't be stopped just like their former king. The Founders' ideas on the common good are still used in the present day. In a argument between the Chicago government and a citizen, Morales, the government tried to do what the Founders wanted government to do. Morales said that loitering laws was violating the right to talk with peers. The Chicago government said loitering was and act of gangs and it disturbed the public. In the end of the argument Morales won. The Founders liked the Roman Republic. In the Roman Republic the people ruled themselves. One of the governments' purposes was to serve every citizen. The Romans would hire representative when a community got to big. These representatives would represent the communities in government.
it should be limited
the federal government should be limited in power
They favored a strong state government and a weak national government
The republicans thought they should follow the articles of confederation and have a weak central government The federalists thought there should be a strong central government
Supporters of the Constitution thought that the central government should
Limited but absolute control of the US government.
Yes, "Founders'" should be capitalized as it is a proper noun referring to the founders of a particular organization or group.
Natural rights, sometimes called unalienable rights, are rights the Framers believed all people are born with and can never give up. The Founders argued that the government's central purpose should be to protect and uphold these rights.
the federal government should be limited in power
the Federalists