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Modern World History 2.8 Early American Democracy 34 Views
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Transcript
- 00:04
The revolution is over. Yay.
- 00:07
The British have been banished from the
- 00:08
US of A. Yay. Time for a new nation to set
- 00:12
up a government that actually works. Yay?
- 00:14
Well, contrary to what grandpa might tell
Full Transcript
- 00:17
you at the dinner table, governing a
- 00:19
country is hard work, especially when
- 00:21
you're building a democracy from scratch
- 00:23
and, well Martha Stewart wasn't exactly
- 00:25
around with an easy-to-follow recipe. And
- 00:28
the founding fathers did not get our
- 00:30
government right the first time around...
- 00:31
surprise surprise. They set out to create
- 00:34
a country with the Articles of
- 00:36
Confederation in 1777. Well, this document
- 00:39
was problematic from the beginning.
- 00:41
Because the writers of the Articles were
- 00:42
terrified of having a too-powerful
- 00:45
central government for obvious reasons,
- 00:47
they made the central government of the
- 00:49
new United States too weak. Flimsy,
- 00:52
almost. Well, the American government
- 00:53
couldn't tax its citizens, couldn't raise
- 00:55
an army. There was no president, no
- 00:57
national court, and no national strategy
- 00:59
for combating the restrictive trade
- 01:01
policies put in place by various
- 01:03
European nations. Well that thing was so
- 01:05
weak, you'd think it was on muscle relaxants.
- 01:07
It became clear pretty quickly that the
- 01:09
Articles of Confederation needed a do-
- 01:11
over. The document had been ratified by
- 01:13
all 13 States by 1781, but just six years
- 01:16
later, America's leading brainiacs
- 01:18
were in Philadelphia working on what
- 01:20
would become the US Constitution. Hey,
- 01:23
practice makes perfect, right? There were
- 01:25
some huge differences between the
- 01:27
Articles of Confederation and the
- 01:28
Constitution. First off, the Constitution
- 01:31
called for three branches of government.
- 01:32
Makes for a boring tree but a strong
- 01:35
democracy. There was the Executive branch,
- 01:37
which would soon become home to George
- 01:39
Washington and his wooden teeth, the
- 01:41
Legislative branch, or the Congress, and
- 01:43
the Judicial branch, or the court system... now that's a tree worth hugging. Second,
- 01:48
the Constitution was careful to ensure
- 01:50
that no one branch of the government had
- 01:52
too much power. Enter checks and balances,
- 01:55
which unfortunately had nothing to do
- 01:57
with tightrope walkers paying their
- 01:59
bills. It worked a little more like this:
- 02:01
the Senate and the House of
- 02:02
Representatives may pass a bill that the
- 02:04
judiciary then declares unconstitutional.
- 02:08
Wah, wah. Or, the Senate and the House of
- 02:10
Representatives may pass
- 02:12
a bill that the president then vetoes. Wah, wah. Or,
- 02:15
the legislative branch may in certain
- 02:17
circumstances impeach the president or a
- 02:20
member of the judiciary, and we don't
- 02:22
need to tell you which circumstances
- 02:24
those are. *Cough* Clinton. The idea of a central
- 02:28
authoritative government made many
- 02:29
Americans nervous... very nervous. Some say
- 02:33
that those guys are still nervous today.
- 02:34
They just live in Idaho now. At any rate,
- 02:37
two-thirds of the states needed to say "aye"
- 02:40
in order for the Constitution to be
- 02:42
ratified. Well, the founding fathers knew
- 02:44
that they would need to be persuasive in
- 02:46
order to get the necessary votes. Enter
- 02:49
James Madison, also known as father of
- 02:51
the Constitution and the fourth
- 02:52
president of the United States, and our
- 02:54
personal favorite, J-Mads, yeah. J-Mads
- 02:57
wanted his fellow Americans to
- 02:59
understand that, while the Constitution
- 03:00
would create a stronger central
- 03:02
government than the one that had existed
- 03:04
under the Articles of Confederation, the
- 03:06
individual rights that had been at the
- 03:08
center of the American Revolution would
- 03:10
also be central to the new United States.
- 03:12
Our country was like a tootsie roll pop,
- 03:14
except instead of candy at the center,
- 03:16
it was state liberty. Well, with help of
- 03:18
John Jay, who would become the first
- 03:20
Chief Justice of the United States, and
- 03:23
Alexander Hamilton, who would become the
- 03:25
first secretary of the Treasury and the
- 03:27
subject of a super successful Broadway
- 03:29
musical, well, James Madison produced the
- 03:31
Federalist Papers for publication in New
- 03:34
York's newspapers. While the Federalist
- 03:36
Papers made for a compelling read,
- 03:37
several states, including New York,
- 03:39
Virginia, and Massachusetts, refused to
- 03:42
ratify the Constitution until the
- 03:44
founding fathers agreed to the inclusion
- 03:45
of a bill of rights that would protect
- 03:47
specific individual rights. So you've got
- 03:50
New York and company to thank for your
- 03:52
freedom of speech... no big surprise there.
- 03:54
The Constitution was ratified in 1788,
- 03:57
and when the first US Congress met in
- 03:59
1789, Madison got busy composing the
- 04:02
first ten amendments to the Constitution,
- 04:04
also known as, yes, the Bill of Rights. Not
- 04:06
to be confused with our right-handed
- 04:08
friend, Bill. The American Revolution
- 04:10
ended at Yorktown in 1781. It took
- 04:13
another eight years for America's
- 04:15
political leaders to get a functioning
- 04:17
system of government in place, and well, you know,
- 04:19
next time grandpa tells you that he
- 04:21
could run D.C. from the comfort of his
- 04:23
armchair, perhaps you
- 04:24
should consider breaking out the James
- 04:25
Madison cosplay and giving Gramps a
- 04:28
lesson in American history, which you now
- 04:30
know thanks to us. You're welcome.
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