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Hi, I’m John Green, this is Crash Course U.S. History,
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and today we’re going to talk about the United States Constitution.
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And, in doing so, we’re going to explore
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how the American style of government became the envy of the entire world,
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so much so that everyone else copied us. [hey oh]
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What’s that, Stan?
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We’re not gonna talk about other countries stealing our form of government?
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Because no other countries stole our form of government?
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That doesn’t seem possible, Stan. ['MURICA!]
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[Libertage]
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No, Stan, not the Libertage.
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Cue the intro!
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[BEST]
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[intro music]
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[intro music]
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[intro music]
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[intro music]
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[intro music]
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[EVAR]
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So,
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today we’re going to learn why the green areas of not-America didn’t copy us.
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[nonMurica]
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Alright, so as Americans may dimly remember from history classes,
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the constitutional system we’ve been living under since 1788,
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the year of the first Presidential election,
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was not the original American government.
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The first government set up by the Continental Congress
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was called the Articles of Confederation and it was,
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in a word: Bad.
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In two words, it was not good. Which is why it only lasted 10 years
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The problem with the confederation is that it wasn’t so much a framework
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for a national government as it was a “firm league of friendship,”
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which unfortunately only sounds like a team of Care Bear Superheroes.
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[Care Bear Stair tax?]
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The Articles set up a “government” that consisted of a one-house
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body of delegates, with each state having a single vote,
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who, acting collectively,
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could make decisions on certain issues that affected all the states.
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There was no president and no judiciary.
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You can try to tell me that John Hanson, the president of the congress
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was the first American president, but it’s just not true.
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Any decision required 9 of the 13 congressional votes,
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which pretty much guaranteed that no decisions would ever be made.
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Ahh, supermajorities: Always so efficient. [SARCASM]
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But besides the 2/3rds requirement,
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the Congress was very limited in what it could actually do.
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The government could declare war, conduct foreign affairs and make treaties—
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basically, the stuff you need to do to go to war with England.
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It could coin money but it couldn’t collect taxes, that was left to states,
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so if you needed money to, say, go to war with Britain,
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[you know, regular tuesday stuff]
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you had to ask the states politely.
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The articles could be amended, but that required a unanimous vote,
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so zero amendments were ever passed.
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The government was deliberately weak,
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which followed logically from Americans’ fear of tyrannical governments
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taxing them and quartering soldiers in their houses and so on.
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But here’s the thing, weak government is like nonalcoholic beer:
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It’s useless.
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That said, the Articles government did accomplish a couple things.
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First, it won the war.
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So yay—
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unless you were a slave or a Native American, in which case,
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you know, probable boo.
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Second, the government developed rules
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for dealing with one of the most persistent problems facing the new nation:
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Ohio.
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[For reals]
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Which was called the northwest, presumably because it is
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north and west of...Virginia. [zing]
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Getting control of the land meant taking it from the Indians who were living there,
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and the Articles government was empowered to make treaties, which it did.
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Crash Course World History fans will remember the Athenians telling the Melians
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that the strong do as they can and the weak suffer what they must,
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and the Americans definitely went to the Athenian School of Treaty-Making.
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Through treaties signed at Fort Stanwix and Fort McIntosh,
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the Indians surrendered land north of the Ohio River.
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The biggest accomplishment of the Articles government was
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the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, which set up a process to create
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5 new states between the Ohio and Mississippi rivers.
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Two things to know about this:
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First it acknowledged that American Indians had a claim to the land
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and that they had to be treated better if settlers wanted to avoid violence,
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[just a thought]
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and second, Stan, can I get the foreshadowing filter?
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Yes, perfect.
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The ordinance outlawed slavery in all five of the new states.
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Still, the Articles government was a complete disaster for exactly one reason:
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It could not collect taxes.
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Both the national government and the individual states had racked up
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massive debt to pay for the war, and their main source of revenue became tariffs,
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but because Congress couldn’t impose them, states had to do it individually,
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And this made international trade a total nightmare,
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a fact worsened by the British being kinda cranky about us winning the war
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and therefore unwilling to trade with us.
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In 1786 and 1787, the problem got so bad
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in Massachusetts that farmers rose up and closed the courts
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to prevent them from foreclosing upon their debt-encumbered farms.
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This was called Shays’s Rebellion,
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after Revolutionary War veteran and indebted farmer Daniel Shays.
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The uprising was quelled by the state militia, but for many, this was the sign
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that the Articles government, which couldn’t deal with the crisis at all,
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had to go.
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But not for everyone.
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Thomas Jefferson, for instance, was a fan of Shay’s Rebellion.
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“A little rebellion now and then is a good thing.
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The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time
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with the blood of patriots and tyrants.” [don't tread on that old chestnut]
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Which is all fine and good, I mean, unless you’re the bleeding patriots or tyrants.
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But to most elites, Shays’ Rebellion showed that too much democratic liberty
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among the lower classes could threaten private property.
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Also people who held government bonds were nervous, because without tax revenue,
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they were unlikely to get paid back.
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And when rich people feel like something has to be done,
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[mitt robotney]
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something is usually done. Let’s go to the Thought Bubble.
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The first attempt to do something was a meeting in Annapolis in 1786 aimed at better regulating
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international trade. Only six states sent delegates, but they agreed to meet the next
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year in Philadelphia to “revise” the Articles of Confederation.
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The delegates who met in Philly the next year had a funny definition of “revision,”
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though. Rather than make tweaks to the articles, they wrote a new charter of government, the
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Constitution, which is, with some significant alterations, the same one that Americans live
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under and argue about today.
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Despite what some seem to believe, the 55 men who met in Philadelphia and hammered out
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a new form of government were not gods, but they were far from ordinary, especially for
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the time.
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Most were wealthy, some very much so. More than half had college educations, which was
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super rare since .001% of Americans attended college at the time. About 40% had served
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in the army during the war. But, one thing they all shared was a desire for a stronger
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national government.
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The delegates agreed on many things – the government should have executive, legislative
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and judicial branches and should be republican, with representatives, rather than direct democracy.
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But the devil appeared in the details. Alexander Hamilton, probably the biggest proponent of
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very strong government, wanted the President and Senate to serve life terms, for example.
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That idea went nowhere because the overarching concern of almost all the delegates was to
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create a government that would protect against both tyranny by the government itself and
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tyranny by the people. They didn’t want too much government, but they also didn’t
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want too much democracy, which is why our Presidents are still technically elected not
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directly by regular people but by 538 members of the electoral college.
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This system is so byzantine and strange that when American politicians speak of spreading
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democracy through the world, they never actually advocate for American-style elections.
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Thanks, Thought Bubble.
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Yes, I know, you have fantastic elections in Canada.
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Yeah, right, okay. All that too.
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I get it, okay?
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It’s U.S. History, Thought Bubble.
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So conflicts between competing interests arose quickly
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at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. The first being
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between states with big populations and those with small populations.
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Large states supported James Madison’s Virginia Plan, which called for
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a two-house legislature with representation is both proportional
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to a state’s population.
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And smaller states, fearing that the big boys would dominate,
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rallied behind the New Jersey plan. New Jersey…
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This called for a single legislative house with equal representation for each state,
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as with the Articles of Confederation.
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But, of course, coming from New Jersey, it had no chance of succeeding,
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and sure enough it didn’t. [oh oh oh, he's on fire...]
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Instead we got the Great Compromise,
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brokered by Connecticut’s Roger Sherman, which gave us two houses,
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a House of Representatives
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with representation proportional to each state’s population, and
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a Senate with two members from each state.
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House members, also called Congressmen,
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served two year terms while Senators served six year terms,
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with 1/3 of them being up for election in every 2 year cycle.
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The House was designed to be responsive to the people,
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while the Senate was created to never pass anything
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and it was so masterfully designed that it still works to this day.
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[mission accomplished]
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However, this solution created another problem:
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Who should be counted in terms of representation?
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Slaveholding states wanted slaves to count toward their population,
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even though of course they could not vote, because they were property.
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States with few slaves argued that slaves shouldn’t be counted as people because,
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just to be clear, none of these dudes were not racist.
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[#ForefatherProblems]
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This issue was solved with the notorious 3/5ths compromise.
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For the purpose of determining the population,
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the total number of white people plus 3/5ths the population of “other persons”
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– the word “slave” was never used –
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would be the basis for the calculation.
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So…yeah. That’s still in the constitution. [word "awkward doesn't even come close]
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The constitution also contains a fugitive slave clause
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requiring any escaped slave to be returned to their master.
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And this meant that a slave couldn’t escape slavery by moving to a state
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where slavery was outlawed,
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which meant that on some level some states couldn’t enforce their own laws.
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Spoiler alert: this becomes problematic.
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But except for the tyranny of slavery, the framers really hated tyranny.
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To avoid tyranny of the government, the Constitution embraced two principles:
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Separation of powers and federalism.
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The government was divided into three branches—
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legislative, executive, and judiciary,
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and the constitution incorporated checks and balances:
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each branch can check the power of the others.
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The legislature can make laws, but the president can veto those laws.
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The judiciary can declare laws void, too,
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but that’s a power they had to grant themselves—
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you won’t find it in the Constitution. I promise. You can look for it.
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[press pause. we'll wait.]
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And federalism is the idea that governmental authority rests both
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in the national and the state governments.
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As an American, I am a citizen both of the United States and of the state of Indiana.
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And the national government, the one set up by the constitution,
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is supposed to be limited in scope to certain enumerated powers.
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Most other powers,
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especially the protection of health, safety and morals, are left to the states.
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But the constitution also seeks to protect
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against the radicalism that too much democracy can bring.
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The mostly rich framers worried that the people,
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many of whom were poor and indebted, might vote in congress people,
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or God forbid a President, in favor of,
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like, redistribution of property.
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To hedge against this, senators were elected by the states,
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usually by state legislatures,
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and they were supposed to be, like, leading citizen types.
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You know, the kind of good Americans who take bribes
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and have adulterous affairs in airport bathrooms and patronize prostitutes
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and shoot Alexander Hamilton.
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Anyway,
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the other hedge against too much democracy is the aforementioned electoral college,
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which many Americans hate because
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it has the potential to elect a president who did not win the popular vote,
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but that’s kind of the point.
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The electors were supposed to be prominent, educated men of property
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who were better able to elect a president than, like, the rabble.
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But, the Constitution of the United States is a really impressive document,
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especially when you consider its longevity.
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I mean, as Crash Course World History fans will remember,
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the nation-state is pretty new on the historical scene,
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and the United States established by the constitution,
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is actually one of the oldest ones.
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But the Constitution would be meaningless if it hadn’t been ratified,
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which it was,
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but not without a fight that helped clarify America’s political ideology.
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9 out of the 13 states were required to ratify the Constitution
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in special conventions called for the purpose.