That the present confederation is inadequate to the objects of the union,
seems to be universally allowed. The only question is, what additional powers
are wanting to give due energy to the federal government? We should, however,
be careful, in forming our opinion on this subject, not to impute the temporary
and extraordinary difficulties that have hitherto impeded the execution of the
confederation, to defects in the system itself. For years past, the harpies of
power have been industriously inculcating the idea that all our difficulties
proceed from the impotency of Congress, and have at length succeeded to give to
this sentiment almost universal currency and belief. The devastations, losses
and burdens occasioned by the late war; the excessive importations of foreign
merchandise and luxuries, which have drained the country of its specie and
involved it in debt, are all overlooked, and the inadequacy of the powers of the
present confederation is erroneously supposed to be the only cause of our
difficulties. Hence persons of every description are revelling in the
anticipation of the halcyon days consequent on the establishment of the new
constitution. What gross deception and fatal delusion! Although very
considerable benefit might be derived from strengthening the hands of Congress,
so as to enable them to regulate commerce, and counteract the adverse
restrictions of other nations, which would meet with the concurrence of all
persons; yet this benefit is accompanied in the new constitution with the
scourge of despotic power. . . .
Taxation is in every government a very delicate and difficult subject.
Hence it has been the policy of all wise statesmen, as far as circumstances
permitted, to lead the people by small beginnings and almost imperceptible
degrees, into the habits of taxation. Where the contrary conduct has been
pursued, it has ever failed of full success, not unfrequently proving the ruin
of the projectors. The imposing of a burdensome tax at once on a people,
without the usual gradations, is the severest test that any government can be
put to; despotism itself has often proved unequal to the attempt. Under this
conviction, let us take a review of our situation before and since the
revolution. From the first settlement of this country until the commencement of
the late war, the taxes were so light and trivial as to be scarcely felt by the
people. When we engaged in the expensive contest with Great Britain, the
Congress, sensible of the difficulty of levying the monies necessary to its
support, by direct taxation, had resource to an anticipation of the public
resources, by emitting bills of credit, and thus postponed the necessity of
taxation for several years. This means was pursued to a most ruinous length.
But about the year 80 or 81, it was wholly exhausted, the bills of credit had
suffered such a depreciation from the excessive quantities in circulation, that
they ceased to be useful as a medium. The country at this period was very much
impoverished and exhausted; commerce had been suspended for near six years; the
husbandman, for want of a market, limited his crops to his own subsistence; the
frequent calls of the militia and long continuance in actual service, the
devastations of the enemy, the subsistence of our own armies, the evils of the
depreciation of the paper money, which fell chiefly upon the patriotic and
virtuous part of the community, had all concurred to produce great distress
throughout America. In this situation of affairs, we still had the same
powerful enemy to contend with, who had even more numerous and better appointed
armies in the field than at any former time. Our allies were applied to in this
exigency, but the pecuniary assistance that we could procure from them was soon
exhausted. The only resource now remaining was to obtain by direct taxation,
the moneys necessary for our defense. The history of mankind does not furnish a
similar instance of an attempt to levy such enormous taxes at once, nor of a
people so wholly unprepared and uninured to them-the lamp of sacred liberty must
indeed have burned with unsullied lustre, every sordid principle of the mind
must have been then extinct, when the people not only submitted to the grievous
impositions, but cheerfully exerted themselves to comply with the calls of their
country. Their abilities, however, were not equal to furnish the necessary
sums-indeed, the requisition of the year 1782, amounted to the whole income of
their farms and other property, including the means of their subsistence.
Perhaps the strained exertions of two years would not have sufficed to the
discharge of this requisition. How then can we impute the difficulties of the
people to a due compliance with the requisitions of Congress, to a defect in the
confederation? Any government, however energetic, in similar circumstances,
would have experienced the same fate. If we review the proceedings of the
States, we shall find that they gave every sanction and authority to the
requisitions of Congress that their laws could confer, that they attempted to
collect the sums called for in the same manner as is proposed to be done in
future by the general government, instead of the State legislatures.
The wheels of the general government having been thus clogged, and the
arrearages of taxes still accumulating, it may be asked what prospect is there
of the government resuming its proper tone, -unless more compulsory powers are
granted? To this it may be answered, that the produce of imposts on commerce,
which all agree to vest in Congress, together with the immense tracts of land at
their disposal, will rapidly lessen and eventually discharge the present
encumbrances. When this takes place, the mode by requisition will be found
perfectly adequate to the extraordinary exigencies of the union. Congress have
lately sold land to the amount of eight millions of dollars, which is a
considerable portion of the whole debt.
It is to be lamented that the interested and designing have availed
themselves so successfully of the present crisis, and under the specious
pretence of having discovered a panacea for all the ills of the people, they are
about establishing a system of government, that will prove more destructive to
them than the wooden horse filled with soldiers did in ancient times to the city
of Troy. This horse was introduced by their hostile enemy the Grecians, by a
prostitution of the sacred rites of their religion; in like manner, my fellow
citizens, are aspiring despots among yourselves prostituting the name of a
Washington to cloak their designs upon your liberties.
I would ask how was the proposed Constitution to have showered down those
treasures upon every class of citizens, as has been so industriously inculcated
and so fondly believed by some? Would it have been by the addition of numerous
and expensive establishments? By doubling our judiciaries, instituting federal
courts in every county of every state? By a superb presidential court? By a
large standing army? In short, by putting it in the power of the future
government to levy money at pleasure, and placing this government so independent
of the people as to enable the administration to gratify every corrupt passion
of the mind, to riot on your spoils, without check or control?
A transfer to Congress of the power of imposing imposts on commerce, the
unlimited regulation of trade, and to make treaties, I believe is all that is
wanting to render America as prosperous as it is in the power of any form of
government to render her; this properly understood would meet the views of all
the honest and well meaning.
What gave birth to the late continental Convention? Was it not the
situation of our commerce, which lay at the mercy of every foreign power, who,
from motives of interest or enmity, could restrict and control it without
risking a retaliation on the part of America, as Congress was impotent on this
subject? Such indeed was the case with respect to Britain, whose hostile
regulations gave such a stab to our navigation as to threaten its annihilation,
it became the interest of even the American merchant to give a preference to
foreign bottoms; hence the distress of our seamen, shipwrights, and every
mechanic art dependent on navigation.
By these regulations too, we were limited in markets for our produce; our
vessels were excluded from their West India islands; many of our staple
commodities were denied entrance in Britain. Hence the husbandman were
distressed by the demand for their crops being lessened and their prices
reduced. This is the source to which may be traced every evil we experience,
that can be relieved by a more energetic government. Recollect the language of
complaint for years past; compare the recommendations of Congress, founded on
such complaints, pointing out the remedy; examine the reasons assigned by the
different states for appointing delegates to the late Convention; view the
powers vested in that body-they all harmonize in the sentiment, that the due
regulation of trade and navigation was the anxious wish of every class of
citizens, was the great object of calling the Convention.
This object being provided for by the Constitution proposed by the general
Convention, people overlooked and were not sensible of the needless sacrifice
they were making for it. Allowing for a moment that it would be possible for
trade to flourish under a despotic government, of what avail would be a
prosperous state of commerce, when the produce of it would be at the absolute
disposal of an arbitrary unchecked general government, who may levy at pleasure
the most oppressive taxes; who may destroy every principle of freedom; who may
even destroy the privilege of complaining.
After so recent a triumph over British despots, after such torrents of blood
and treasure have been spent, after involving ourselves in the distresses of an
arduous war, and incurring such a debt, for the express purpose of asserting the
rights of humanity, it is truly astonishing that a set of men among ourselves
should have had the effrontery to attempt the destruction of our liberties. But
in this enlightened age, to dupe the people by the arts they are practising, is
still more extraordinary.
Antifederalist Number 22
Articles of confederation simply requires amendments, particularly for commercial power and judicial power;
constitution goes too far
Benjamin Austin of Massachusetts used the pen-name "CANDIDUS."
Taken from two letters by "Candidus" which appeared in the [Boston]
Independent Chronicle, December 6 and 20, 1787.
Many people are sanguine for the Constitution, because they apprehend
our commerce will be benefited. I would advise those persons to distinguish
between the evils that arise from extraneous causes and our private
imprudencies, and those that arise from our government. It does not appear that
the embarrassments of our trade will be removed by the adoption of this
Constitution. The powers of Europe do not lay any extraordinary duties on our
oil, fish, or tobacco, because of our government; neither do they discourage our
ship building on this account. I would ask what motive would induce Britain to
repeal the duties on our oil, or France on our fish, if we should adopt the
proposed Constitution? Those nations laid these duties to promote their own
fishery, etc., and let us adopt what mode of government we please, they will
pursue their own politics respecting our imports and exports, unless we can
check them by some commercial regulations.
But it may be said, that such commercial regulations will take place after
we have adopted the Constitution, and that the northern states would then become
carriers for the southern. The great question then is, whether it is necessary
in order to obtain these purposes, for every state to give up their whole power
of legislation and taxation, and become an unwieldy republic, when it is
probable the important object of our commerce could be effected by a uniform
navigation act, giving Congress full power to regulate the whole commerce of the
States? This power Congress have often said was sufficient to answer all their
purposes. The circular letter from the Boston merchants and others, was urgent
on this subject. Also the navigation act of this state [Massachusetts], was
adopted upon similar principles, and . . . was declared by our Minister in
England, to be the most effectual plan to promote our navigation, provided it
had been adopted by the whole confederacy.
But it may be said, this regulation of commerce, without energy to enforce a
compliance, is quite ideal. Coercion with some persons seems the principal
object, but I believe we have more to expect from the affections of the people,
than from an armed body of men. Provided a uniform commercial system was
adopted, and each State felt its agreeable operations, we should have but little
occasion to exercise force. But however, as power is thought necessary to raise
an army, if required, to carry into effect any federal measure, I am willing to
place it, where it is likely to be used with the utmost caution. This power I
am willing to place among the confederated States, to be exercised when two
thirds of them in their legislative capacities shall say the common good
requires it. But to trust this power in the hands of a few men delegated for
two, four and six years, is complimenting the ambition of human nature too
highly, to risk the tranquility of these States on their absolute determination.
Certain characters now on the stage, we have reason to venerate, but though
this country is now blessed with a Washington, Franklin, Hancock and Adams, yet
posterity may have reason to rue the day when their political welfare depends on
the decision of men who may fill the places of these worthies.
The advocates for the Constitution, have always assumed an advantage by
saying, that their opposers have never offered any plan as a substitute; the
following outlines are therefore submitted, not as originating from an
individual, but as copied from former resolutions of Congress, and united with
some parts of the Constitution proposed by the respectable convention. This
being the case, I presume it will not be invalidated by the cant term of
antifederalism.
lst. That the Legislature of each state, empower Congress to frame a
navigation act, to operate uniformly throughout the states; receiving to
Congress all necessary powers to regulate our commerce with foreign nations, and
among the several states, and with the Indian tribes. The revenue arising from
the impost to be subject to their appropriations, "to enable them to
fulfill their public engagements with foreign creditors."
2nd. That the Legislature of each state, instruct their delegates in
Congress, to frame a treaty of AMITY for the purposes of discharging each
state's proportion of the public debt, either foreign or domestic, and to
enforce (if necessary) their immediate payment. Each state obligating
themselves in the treaty of amity, to furnish (whenever required by Congress) a
proportionate number of the Militia who are ever to be well organized and
disciplined, for the purposes of repelling any invasion; suppressing any
insurrection; or reducing any delinquent state within the confederacy, to a
compliance with the federal treaty of commerce and amity. Such assistance to be
furnished by the Supreme Executive of each state, on the application of
Congress. The troops in cases of invasion to be under the command of the
Supreme Executive of the state immediately in danger; but in cases of
insurrection, and when employed against any delinquent state in the confederacy,
the troops to be under the command of Congress.
3d. That such states as did not join the confederacy of commerce and amity,
should be considered as aliens; and any goods brought from such state into any
of the confederated states, together with their vessels, should be subject to
heavy extra duties.
4th. The treaty of amity, agreed to by the several states, should expressly
declare that no State (without the consent of Congress) should enter into any
treaty, alliances, or confederacy; grant letters of marque and reprisal; make
anything but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts; pass any bill of
attainder or ex post facto law, or impair the obligations of contracts; engage
in war, or declare peace.
5th. A Supreme Judicial Court to be constituted for the following federal
purposes-to extend to all treaties made previous to, or which shall be made
under the authority of the confederacy; all cases affecting Ambassadors, and
other public Ministers and Consuls; controversies between two or more states;
and between citizens of the same state claiming lands under grants of different
states; to define and punish piracies, and felonies committed on the high seas,
and offenses against the law of nations.
6th. That it be recommended to Congress, that the said navigation act, and
treaty of amity, be sent to the Legislatures (or people) of the several states,
for their assenting to, and ratifying the same.
7th. A regular statement and account of the receipts and expenditures, of
all public monies, should be published from time to time.
The above plan it is humbly conceived-secures the internal government of the
several states; promotes the commerce of the whole union; preserves a due degree
of energy; lays restraints on aliens; secures the several states against
invasions and insurrection by a MILITIA, rather than a STANDING ARMY; checks all
ex post facto laws; cements the states by certain federal restrictions; confines
the judiciary powers to national matters; and provides for the public
information of receipts and expenditures. In a word, it places us in a complete
federal state.
The resolves of Congress, 18th April, 1783, "recommends to the several
States, to invest them with powers to levy for the use of the United States,
certain duties upon goods, imported from any foreign port, island or plantation;"
which measures is declared by them, "to be a system more free, from well
founded exception, and is better calculated to receive the approbation of the
several States, than any other, that the wisdom of Congress could devise; and if
adopted, would enable them to fulfill their public engagements with their
foreign creditors."
Should we adopt this plan, no extraordinary expenses would arise, and
Congress having but one object to attend, every commercial regulation would be
uniformly adopted; the duties of impost and excise, would operate equally
throughout the states; our ship building and carrying trade, would claim their
immediate attention; and in consequence thereof, our agriculture, trade and
manufactures would revive and flourish. No acts of legislation, independent of
this great business, would disaffect one State against the other; but the whole,
. . . in one Federal System of commerce, would serve to remove all local
attachments, and establish our navigation upon a most extensive basis. The
powers of Europe, would be alarmed at our Union, and would fear lest we should
retaliate on them by laying restrictions on their trade
These states, by the blessing of Heaven, are now in a very tranquil state.
This government, in particular, has produced an instance of ENERGY, in
suppressing a late rebellion, which no absolute monarchy can boast. And
notwithstanding the insinuations of a "small party," who are ever
branding the PEOPLE with the most opprobrious epithets-representing them as
aiming to level all distinctions; emit paper money; encourage the rebellion-yet
the present General Court, the voice of that body, whom they have endeavored to
stigmatize, have steadily pursued measures foreign from the suggestions of such
revilers. And the public credit has been constantly appreciating since the
present Administration.
Let us then be cautious how we disturb this general harmony. Every exertion
is now making, by the people, to discharge their taxes. Industry and frugality
prevail. Our commerce is every day increasing by the enterprise of our
merchants. And above all, the PEOPLE of the several states are convinced of the
necessity of adopting some Federal Commercial Plan.
Antifederalist Number 23
Certain powers necessary for the common defense, can and should be limited
In Federalist No. 23, Alexander Hamilton spoke of the necessity for an
energetic government. "BRUTUS" replied.
Taken from the 7th and 8th essays of "Brutus" in The New-York Journal, January 3 and 10, 1788.
In a confederated government, where the powers are divided between the
general and the state government, it is essential . . . that the revenues of the
country, without which no government can exist, should be divided between them,
and so apportioned to each, as to answer their respective exigencies, as far as
human wisdom can effect such a division and apportionment.
No such allotment is made in this constitution, but every source of revenue
is under the control of Congress; it therefore follows, that if this system is
intended to be a complex and not a simple, a confederate and not an entire
consolidated government, it contains in it the sure seeds of its own
dissolution. One of two things must happen. Either the new constitution will
become a mere nudum pactum, and all the authority of the rulers under it be
cried down, as has happened to the present confederacy. Or the authority of the
individual states will be totally supplanted, and they will retain the mere form
without any of the powers of government. To one or the other of these issues, I
think, this new government, if it is adopted, will advance with great celerity.
It is said, I know, that such a separation of the sources of revenue, cannot
be made without endangering the public safety-"unless (says a writer)
[Alexander Hamilton] it can be shown that the circumstances which may affect the
public safety are reducible within certain determinate limits; unless the
contrary of this position can be fairly and rationally disputed, it must be
admitted, as a necessary consequence, that there can be no limitation of that
authority which is to provide for the defense and protection of the community,
etc."
The pretended demonstration of this writer will instantly vanish, when it is
considered, that the protection and defense of the community is not intended to
be entrusted solely into the hands of the general government, and by his own
confession it ought not to be. It is true this system commits to the general
government the protection and defense of the community against foreign force and
invasion, against piracies and felonies on the high seas, and against
insurrection among ourselves. They are also authorized to provide for the
administration of justice in certain matters of a general concern, and in some
that I think are not so. But it ought to be left to the state governments to
provide for the protection and defense of the citizen against the hand of
private violence, and the wrongs done or attempted by individuals to each other.
Protection and defense against the murderer, the robber, the thief, the cheat,
and the unjust person, is to be derived from the respective state governments.
The just way of reasoning therefore on this subject is this, the general
government is to provide for the protection and defense of the community against
foreign attacks, etc. They therefore ought to have authority sufficient to
effect this, so far as is consistent with the providing for our internal
protection and defense. The state governments are entrusted with the care of
administering justice among its citizens, and the management of other internal
concerns; they ought therefore to retain power adequate to that end. The
preservation of internal peace and good order, and the due administration of law
and justice, ought to be the first care of every government. The happiness of a
people depends infinitely more on this than it does upon all that glory and
respect which nations acquire by the most brilliant martial achievements. And I
believe history will furnish but few examples of nations who have duly attended
to these, who have been subdued by foreign invaders. If a proper respect and
submission to the laws prevailed over all orders of men in our country; and if a
spirit of public and private justice, economy, and industry influenced the
people, we need not be under any apprehensions but what they would be ready to
repel any invasion that might be made on the country. And more than this, I
would not wish from them. A defensive war is the only one I think justifiable.
I do not make these observations to prove, that a government ought not to be
authorised to provide for the protection and defense of a country against
external enemies, but to show that this is not the most important, much less the
only object of their care.
The European governments are almost all of them framed, and administered
with a view to arms, and war, as that in which their chief glory consists. They
mistake the end of government. It was designed to save men's lives, not to
destroy them. We ought to furnish the world with an example of a great people,
who in their civil institutions hold chiefly in view, the attainment of virtue,
and happiness among ourselves. Let the monarchs in Europe share among them the
glory of depopulating countries, and butchering thousands of their innocent
citizens, to revenge private quarrels, or to punish an insult offered to a wife,
a mistress, or a favorite. I envy them not the honor, and I pray heaven this
country may never be ambitious of it. The czar Peter the great, acquired great
glory by his arms; but all this was nothing, compared with the true glory which
he obtained, by civilizing his rude and barbarous subjects, diffusing among them
knowledge, and establishing and cultivating the arts of life. By the former he
desolated countries, and drenched the earth with human blood; by the latter he
softened the ferocious nature of his people, and pointed them to the means of
human happiness. The most important end of government then, is the proper
direction of its internal police, and economy; this is the province of the state
governments, and it is evident, and is indeed admitted, that these ought to be
under their control. Is it not then preposterous, and in the highest degree
absurd, when the state governments are vested with powers so essential to the
peace and good order of society, to take from them the means of their own
preservation?
The idea that the powers of congress in respect to revenue ought to be
unlimited, because 'the circumstances which may affect the public safety are not
reducible to certain determinate limits' is novel, as it relates to the
government of the United States. The inconveniencies which resulted from the
feebleness of the present confederation was discerned, and felt soon after its
adoption. It was soon discovered, that a power to require money, without either
the authority or means to enforce a collection of it, could not be relied upon
either to provide for the common defense, discharge the national debt, or for
support of government. Congress therefore, as early as February 1781,
recommended to the states to invest them with a power to levy an impost of :five
per cent ad valorem, on all imported goods, as a fund to be appropriated to
discharge the debts already contracted, or which should hereafter be contracted
for the support of the war, to be continued until the debts should be fully and
finally discharged. There is not the most distant idea held out in this act,
that an unlimited power to collect taxes, duties and excises was necessary to be
vested in the United States, and yet this was a time of the most pressing danger
and distress. The idea then was, that if certain definite funds were assigned
to the union, which were certain in their natures, productive, and easy of
collection, it would enable them to answer their engagements, and provide for
their defense, and the impost of five per cent was fixed upon for the purpose.
This same subject was revived in the winter and spring of 1783, and after a
long consideration of the subject, many schemes were proposed. The result was,
a recommendation of the revenue system of April 1783; this system does not
suggest an idea that it was necessary to grant the United States unlimited
authority in matters of revenue. A variety of amendments were proposed to this
system, some of which are upon the journals of Congress, but it does not appear
that any of them proposed to invest the general government with discretionary
power to raise money. On the contrary, all of them limit them to certain
definite objects, and fix the bounds over which they could not pass. This
recommendation was passed at the conclusion of the war, and was founded on an
estimate of the whole national debt. It was computed, that one million and an
half of dollars, in addition to the impost, was a sufficient sum to pay the
annual interest of the debt, and gradually to abolish the principal. Events
have proved that their estimate was sufficiently liberal, as the domestic debt
appears upon its being adjusted to be less than it was computed; and since this
period a considerable portion of the principal of the domestic debt has been
discharged by the sale of the western lands. It has been constantly urged by
Congress, and by individuals, ever since, until lately, that had this revenue
been appropriated by the states, as it was recommended, it would have been
adequate to every exigency of the union. Now indeed it is insisted, that all
the treasures of the country are to be under the control of that body, whom we
are to appoint to provide for our protection and defense against foreign
enemies. The debts of the several states, and the support of the governments of
them are to trust to fortune and accident. If the union should not have
occasion for all the money they can raise, they will leave a portion for the
state, but this must be a matter of mere grace and favor. Doctrines like these
would not have been listened to by any state in the union, at a time when we
were pressed on every side by a powerful enemy, and were called upon to make
greater exertions than we have any reason to expect we shall ever be again.
I may be asked to point out the sources, from which the general government
could derive a sufficient revenue, to answer the demands of the union. ... There
is one source of revenue, which it is agreed, the general government ought to
have the sole control of. This is an impost upon all goods imported from
foreign countries. This would, of itself, be very productive, and would be
collected with ease and certainty. It will be a fund too, constantly
increasing, for our commerce will grow with the productions of the country. And
these, together with our consumption of foreign goods, wilt increase with our
population. It is said, that the impost will not produce a sufficient sum to
satisfy the demands of the general government; perhaps it would not.... My own
opinion is, that the objects from which the general government should have
authority to raise a revenue, should be of such a nature, that the tax should be
raised by simple laws, with few officers, with certainty and expedition, and
with the least interference with the internal police of the states. Of this
nature is the impost on imported goods. And it appears to me that a duty on
exports, would also be of this nature. Therefore, for ought I can discover,
this would be the best source of revenue to grant the general government. I
know neither the Congress nor the state legislatures will have authority under
the new constitution to raise a revenue in this way. But I cannot perceive the
reason of the restriction. It appears to me evident, that a tax on articles
exported, would be as nearly equal as any that we can expect to lay, and it
certainly would be collected with more ease and less expense than any direct
tax. I do not however, contend for this mode; it may be liable to well founded
objections that have not occurred to me. But this I do contend for, that some
mode is practicable, and that limits must be marked between the general
government, and the states on this head, or if they be not, either the Congress
in the exercise of this power, will deprive the state legislatures of the means
of their existence, or the states by resisting the constitutional authority of
the general government, will render it nugatory.
The next powers vested by this Constitution in the general government, which
we shall consider, are those which authorize them to "borrow money on the
credit of the United States, and to raise and support armies." I take these
two together and connect them with the power to lay and collect taxes, duties,
imposts and excises, because their extent, and the danger that will arise from
the exercise of these powers, cannot be fully understood, unless they are viewed
in relation to each other.
The power to borrow money is general and unlimited, and the clause so often
before referred to, authorizes the passing [of] any laws proper and necessary to
carry this into execution. Under this authority, Congress may mortgage any or
all the revenues of the union, as a fund to loan money upon; and it is probable,
in this way, they may borrow of foreign nations, a principal sum, the interest
of which will be equal to the annual revenues of the country. By this means,
they may create a national debt, so large, as to exceed the ability of the
country ever to sink. I can scarcely contemplate a greater calamity that could
befall this country, than to be loaded with a debt exceeding their ability ever
to discharge. If this be a just remark, it is unwise and improvident to vest in
the general government a power to borrow at discretion, without any limitation
or restriction.
It may possibly happen that the safety and welfare of the country may
require, that money be borrowed, and it is proper when such a necessity arises
that the power should be exercised by the general government. But it certainly
ought never to be exercised, but on the most urgent occasions, and then we
should not borrow of foreigners if we could possibly avoid it.
The constitution should therefore have so restricted the exercise of this
power as to have rendered it very difficult for the government to practice it.
The present confederation requires the assent of nine states to exercise this,
and a number of other important powers of the confederacy. It would certainly
have been a wise provision in this constitution, to have made it necessary that
two thirds of the members should assent to borrowing money. When the necessity
was indispensable, this assent would always be given, and in no other cause
ought it to be.
The power to raise armies is indefinite and unlimited, and authorises the
raising [of] forces, as well in peace as in war. Whether the clause which
empowers the Congress to pass all laws which are proper and necessary, to carry
this into execution, will not authorise them to impress men for the army, is a
question well worthy [of] consideration. If the general legislature deem it for
the general welfare to raise a body of troops, and they cannot be procured by
voluntary enlistments, it seems evident, that it will be proper and necessary to
effect it, that men be impressed from the militia to make up the deficiency.
These powers taken in connection, amount to this: that the general
government have unlimited authority and control over all the wealth and all the
force of the union. The advocates for this scheme, would favor the world with a
new discovery, if they would show, what kind of freedom or independency is left
to the state governments, when they cannot command any part of the property or
of the force of the country, but at the will of the Congress. It seems to me as
absurd, as it would be to say, that I was free and independent, when I had
conveyed all my property to another, and was tenant to him, and had beside,
given an indenture of myself to serve him during life.
Antifederalist Number 24
Objections to a standing army (part 1)
BRUTUS
The first essay is taken from the ninth letter of "BRUTUS" which
appeared in The New-York Journal, January 17, 1788.
Standing armies are dangerous to the liberties of a people.
If necessary, the truth of the position might be confirmed by the history of
almost every nation in the world. A cloud of the most illustrious patriots of
every age and country, where freedom has been enjoyed, might be adduced as
witnesses in support of the sentiment. But I presume it would be useless, to
enter into a labored argument, to prove to the people of America, a position
which has so long and so generally been received by them as a kind of axiom.
Some of the advocates for this new system controvert this sentiment, as they
do almost every other that has been maintained by the best writers on free
government. Others, though they will not expressly deny, that standing armies
in times of peace are dangerous, yet join with these in maintaining, that it is
proper the general government should be vested with the power to do it. I shall
now proceed to examine the arguments they adduce in support of their opinions.
A writer, in favor of this system, treats this objection as a ridiculous
one. He supposes it would be as proper to provide against the introduction of
Turkish Janizaries, or against making the Alcoran a rule of faith.'
{1 A citizen of America [Noah Webster], An Examination Into the Leading
Principles of the Federal Constitution proposed by the late Convention held at
Philadelphia. With Answers to the Principal Objections Raised Against the
System (Philadelphia, 1787), reprinted in Ford (ed.), Pamphlets pp. 29-65.}
From the positive, and dogmatic manner, in which this author delivers his
opinions, and answers objections made to his sentiments-one would conclude, that
he was some pedantic pedagogue who had been accustomed to deliver his dogmas to
pupils, who always placed implicit faith in what he delivered.
But, why is this provision so ridiculous? Because, says this author, it is
unnecessary. But, why is it unnecessary? Because, "the principles and
habits, as well as the power of the Americans are directly opposed to standing
armies; and there is as little necessity to guard against them by positive
constitutions, as to prohibit the establishment of the Mahometan religion."
It is admitted then, that a standing army in time of peace is an evil. I ask
then, why should this government be authorised to do evil? If the principles
and habits of the people of this country are opposed to standing armies in time
of peace, if they do not contribute to the public good, but would endanger the
public liberty and happiness, why should the government be vested with the
power? No reason can be given, why rulers should be authorised to do, what, if
done, would oppose the principles and habits of the people, and endanger the
public safety; but there is every reason in the world, that they should be
prohibited from the exercise of such a power. But this author supposes, that no
danger is to be apprehended from the exercise of this power, because if armies
are kept up, it will be by the people themselves, and therefore, to provide
against it would be as absurd as for a man to "pass a law in his family,
that no troops should be quartered in his family by his consent." This
reasoning supposes, that the general government is to be exercised by the people
of America themselves. But such an idea is groundless and absurd. There is
surely a distinction between the people and their rulers, even when the latter
are representatives of the former. They certainly are not identically the same,
and it cannot be disputed, but it may and often does happen, that they do not
possess the same sentiments or pursue the same interests. I think I have shown
[in a previous paper] that as this government is constructed, there is little
reason to expect, that the interest of the people and their rulers will be the
same.
Besides, if the habits and sentiments of the people of America are to be
relied upon, as the sole security against the encroachment of their rulers, all
restrictions in constitutions are unnecessary; nothing more is requisite, than
to declare who shall be authorized to exercise the powers of government, and
about this we need not be very careful-for the habits and principles of the
people will oppose every abuse of power. This I suppose to be the sentiments of
this author, as it seems to be of many of the advocates of this new system. An
opinion like this, is as directly opposed to the principles and habits of the
people of America, as it is to the sentiments of every writer of reputation on
the science of government, and repugnant to the principles of reason and common
sense.
The idea that there is no danger of the establishment of a standing army,
under the new constitution, is without foundation.
It is a well known fact, that a number of those who had an agency in
producing this system, and many of those who it is probable will have a
principal share in the administration of the government under it, if it is
adopted, are avowedly in favor of standing armies. It is a language common
among them, "That no people can be kept in order, unless the government
have an army to awe them into obedience; it is necessary to support the dignity
of government, to have a military establishment. And there will not be wanting a
variety of plausible reasons to justify the raising one, drawn from the danger
we are in from the Indians on our frontiers, or from the European provinces in
our neighborhood. If to this we add, that an army will afford a decent support,
and agreeable employment to the young men of many families, who are too indolent
to follow occupations that will require care and industry, and too poor to live
without doing any business, we can have little reason to doubt but that we shall
have a large standing army as soon as this government can find money to pay
them, and perhaps sooner.
A writer, who is the boast of the advocates of this new constitution, has
taken great pains to show, that this power was proper and necessary to be vested
in the general government.
He sets out with calling in question the candor and integrity of those who
advance the objection; and with insinuating, that it is their intention to
mislead the people, by alarming their passions, rather than to convince them by
arguments addressed to their understandings.
The man who reproves another for a fault, should be careful that he himself
be not guilty of it. How far this writer has manifested a spirit of candor, and
has pursued fair reasoning on this subject, the impartial public will judge,
when his arguments pass before them in review.
He first attempts to show, that this objection is futile and disingenuous,
because the power to keep up standing armies, in time of peace, is vested, under
the present government, in the legislature of every state in the union, except
two. Now this is so far from being true, that it is expressly declared by the
present articles of confederation, that no body of forces "Shall be kept up
by any state, in time of peace, except such number only, as in the judgment of
the United States in Congress assembled, shall be deemed requisite to garrison
the forts necessary for the defence of such state." Now, was it candid and
ingenuous to endeavour to persuade the public, that the general government had
no other power than your own legislature have on this head; when the truth is,
your legislature have no authority to raise and keep up any forces?
He next tells us, that the power given by this constitution, on this head,
is similar to that which Congress possess under the present confederation. As
little ingenuity is manifested in this representation as in that of the former.
I shall not undertake to inquire whether or not Congress are vested with a
power to keep up a standing army in time of peace; it has been a subject warmly
debated in Congress, more than once, since the peace; and one of the most
respectable states in the union, were so fully convinced that they had no such
power, that they expressly instructed their delegates to enter a solemn protest
against it on the journals of Congress, should they attempt to exercise it.
But should it be admitted that they have the power, there is such a striking
dissimilarity between the restrictions under which the present Congress can
exercise it, and that of the proposed government, that the comparison will serve
rather to show the impropriety of vesting the proposed government with the
power, than of justifying it.
It is acknowledged by this writer, that the powers of Congress, under the
present confederation, amount to little more than that of recommending. If they
determine to raise troops, they are obliged to effect it through the authority
of the state legislatures. This will, in the first instance, be a most powerful
restraint upon them, against ordering troops to be raised. But if they should
vote an army, contrary to the opinion and wishes of the people, the legislatures
of the respective states would not raise them. Besides, the present Congress
hold their places at the wilt and pleasure of the legislatures of the states who
send them, and no troops can be raised, but by the assent of nine states out of
the thirteen. Compare the power proposed to be lodged in the legislature on
this head, under this constitution, with that vested in the present Congress,
and every person of the least discernment, whose understanding is not totally
blinded by prejudice, will perceive, that they bear no analogy to each other.
Under the present confederation, the representatives of nine states, out of
thirteen, must assent to the raising of troops, or they cannot be levied. Under
the proposed constitution, a less number than the representatives of two states,
in the house of representatives, and the representatives of three states and an
half in the senate, with the assent of the president, may raise any number of
troops they please. The present Congress are restrained from an undue exercise
of this power; from this consideration, they know the state legislatures,
through whose authority it must be carried into effect, would not comply with
the requisition for the purpose, [if] it was evidently opposed to the public
good. The proposed constitution authorizes the legislature to carry their
determinations into execution, without intervention of any other body between
them and the people. The Congress under the present form are amenable to, and
removable by, the legislatures of the respective states, and are chosen for one
year only. The proposed constitution does not make the members of the
legislature accountable to, or removable by the state legislatures at all; and
they are chosen, the one house for six, and the other for two years; and cannot
be removed until their time of service is expired, let them conduct ever so
badly. The public will judge, from the above comparison, how just a claim this
writer has to that candor he asserts to possess. In the mean time, to convince
him, and the advocates for this system, that I possess some share of candor, I
pledge myself to give up all opposition to it, on the head of standing armies,
if the power to raise them be restricted as it is in the present confederation;
and I believe I may safely answer, not only for myself, but for all who make the
objection, that they will [not] be satisfied with less.
Antifederalist Number 25
Objections to a standing army (part 2)
From the tenth letter of "BRUTUS" appearing in The New-York
Journal, January 24, 1788.
The liberties of a people are in danger from a large standing army, not only
because the rulers may employ them for the purposes of supporting themselves in
any usurpations of power, which they may see proper to exercise; but there is
great hazard, that an army will subvert the forms of the government, under whose
authority they are raised, and establish one [rule] according to the pleasure of
their leaders.
We are informed, in the faithful pages of history, of such events frequently
happening. Two instances have been mentioned in a former paper. They are so
remarkable, that they are worthy of the most careful attention of every lover of
freedom. They are taken from the history of the two most powerful nations that
have ever existed in the world; and who are the most renowned, for the freedom
they enjoyed, and the excellency of their constitutions-I mean Rome and Britain.
In the first, the liberties of the commonwealth were destroyed, and the
constitution over-turned, by an army, led by Julius Caesar, who was appointed to
the command by the constitutional authority of that commonwealth. He changed it
from a free republic, whose fame ... is still celebrated by all the world, into
that of the most absolute despotism. A standing army effected this change, and
a standing army supported it through a succession of ages, which are marked in
the annals of history with the most horrid cruelties, bloodshed, and carnage-the
most devilish, beastly, and unnatural vices, that ever punished or disgraced
human nature.
The same army, that in Britain, vindicated the liberties of that people from
the encroachments and despotism of a tyrant king, assisted Cromwell, their
General, in wresting from the people that liberty they had so dearly earned.
You may be told, these instances will not apply to our case. But those who
would persuade you to believe this, either mean to deceive you, or have not
themselves considered the subject.
I firmly believe, no country in the world had ever a more patriotic army,
than the one which so ably served this country in the late war. But had the
General who commanded them been possessed of the spirit of a Julius Caesar or a
Cromwell, the liberties of this country . - . [might have] in all probability
terminated with the war. Or bad they been maintained, [they] might have cost
more blood and treasure than was expended in the conflict with Great Britain.
When an anonymous writer addressed the officers of the army at the close of the
war, advising them not to part with their arms, until justice was done them-the
effect it had is well known. It affected them like an electric shock. He wrote
like Caesar; and had the commander in chief, and a few more officers of rank,
countenanced the measure, the desperate resolution. . . [might have] been taken,
to refuse to disband. What the consequences of such a determination would have
been, heaven only knows. The army were in the full vigor of health and spirits,
in the habit of discipline, and possessed of all our military stores and
apparatus. They would have acquired great accessions of strength from the
country. Those who were disgusted at our republican forms of government (for
such there then were, of high rank among us) would have lent them all their aid.
We should in all probability have seen a constitution and laws dictated to us,
at the head of an army, and at the point of a bayonet, and the liberties for
which we had so severely struggled, snatched from us in a moment. It remains a
secret, yet to be revealed, whether this measure was not suggested, or at least
countenanced, by some, who have bad great influence in producing the present
system. Fortunately indeed for this country, it had at the head of the army, a
patriot as well as a general; and many of our principal officers had not
abandoned the characters of citizens, by assuming that of soldiers; and
therefore, the scheme proved abortive. But are we to expect, that this will
always be the case? Are we so much better than the people of other ages and of
other countries, that the same allurements of power and greatness, which led
them aside from their duty, will have no influence upon men in our country?
Such an idea is wild and extravagant. Had we indulged such a delusion, enough
has appeared in a little time past, to convince the most credulous, that the
passion for pomp, power, and greatness, works as powerfully in the hearts of
many of our better sort, as it ever did in any country under heaven. Were the
same opportunity again to offer, we should very probably be grossly
disappointed, if we made dependence, that all who then rejected the overture,
would do it again.
standing army in time of peace, do not arise solely from the apprehension, that
the rulers may employ them for the purpose of promoting their own ambitious
views; but that equal, and perhaps greater danger, is to be apprehended from
their overturning the constitutional powers of the government, and assuming the
power to dictate any form they please.
The advocates for power, in support of this right in the proposed
government, urge that a restraint upon the discretion of the legislatures, in
respect to military establishments in time of peace, would be improper to be
imposed, because they say, it will be necessary to maintain small garrisons on
the frontiers, to guard against the depredations of the Indians, and to be
prepared to repel any encroachments or invasions that may be made by Spain or
Britain.
The amount of this argument stripped of the abundant verbiages with which
the author has dressed it, is this:
It will probably be necessary to keep up a small body of troops to garrison
a few posts, which it will be necessary to maintain, in order to guard against
the sudden encroachments of the Indians, or of the Spaniards and British; and
therefore, the general government ought to be invested with power to raise and
keep up a standing army in time of peace, without restraint, at their
discretion.
I confess, I cannot perceive that the conclusion follows from the premises.
Logicians say, it is not good reasoning to infer a general conclusion from
particular premises. Though I am not much of a logician, it seems to me, this
argument is very like that species of reasoning.
When the patriots in the parliament in Great Britain, contended with such
force of argument, and all the powers of eloquence, against keeping up standing
armies in time of peace, it is obvious they never entertained an idea, that
small garrisons on their frontiers, or in the neighborhood of powers from whom
they were in danger of encroachments, or guards to take care of public arsenals,
would thereby be prohibited.
The advocates for this power further urge that it is necessary, because it
may, and probably will happen, that circumstances will render it requisite to
raise an army to be prepared to repel attacks of an enemy, before a formal
declaration of war, which in modern times has fallen into disuse. If the
constitution prohibited the raising an army, until a war actually commenced, it
would deprive the government of the power of providing for the defense of the
country, until the enemy were within our territory. If the restriction is not
to extend to the raising armies in cases of emergency, but only to the keeping
them up, this would leave the matter to the discretion of the legislature, and
they might, under the pretence that there was danger of an invasion, keep up the
army as long as they judged proper-and hence it is inferred, that the
legislature should have authority to raise and keep up an army without any
restriction. But from these premises nothing more will follow than this: that
the legislature should not be so restrained, as to put it out of their power to
raise an army, when such exigencies as are instanced shall arise. But it does
not thence follow, that the government should be empowered to raise and maintain
standing armies at their discretion as well in peace as in war. If indeed, it
is impossible to vest the general government with the power of raising troops to
garrison the frontier posts, to guard arsenals, or to be prepared to repel an
attack, when we saw a power preparing to make one, without giving them a general
and indefinite authority to raise and keep up armies, without any restriction or
qualification, then this reasoning might have weight; but this has not been
proved nor can it be.
It is admitted that to prohibit the general government from keeping up
standing armies, while yet they were authorised to raise them in case of
exigency, would be an insufficient guard against the danger. A discretion of
such latitude would give room to elude the force of the provision.
It is also admitted that an absolute prohibition against raising troops,
except in cases of actual war, would be improper; because it will be requisite
to raise and support a small number of troops to garrison the important frontier
posts, and to guard arsenals; and it may happen, that the danger of an attack
from a foreign power may be so imminent, as to render it highly proper we should
raise an army, in order to be prepared to resist them. But to raise and keep up
forces for such purposes and on such occasions, is not included in the idea of
keeping up standing armies in times of peace.
It is a thing very practicable to give the government sufficient authority
to provide for these cases, and at the same time to provide a reasonable and
competent security against the evil of a standing army-a clause to the following
purpose would answer the end:
As standing armies in time of peace arc dangerous to liberty, and have often
been the means of overturning the best constitutions of government, no standing
army, or troops of any description whatsoever, shall be raised or kept up by the
legislature, except so many as shall be necessary for guards to the arsenals of
the United States, or for garrisons to such posts on the frontiers, as it shall
be deemed absolutely necessary to hold, to secure the inhabitants, and
facilitate the trade with the Indians: unless when the United States are
threatened with an attack or invasion from some foreign power, in which case the
legislature shall be authorised to raise an army to be prepared to repel the
attack; provided that no troops whatsoever shall be raised in time of peace,
without the assent of two thirds of the members, composing both houses of the
legislature.
A clause similar to this would afford sufficient latitude to the legislature
to raise troops in all cases that were really necessary, and at the same time
competent security against the establishment of that dangerous engine of
despotism, a standing army.
The same writer who advances the arguments I have noticed, makes a number of
other observations with a view to prove that the power to raise and keep up
armies ought to be discretionary in the general legislature. Some of them are
curious. He instances the raising of troops in Massachusetts and Pennsylvania,
to show the necessity of keeping a standing army in time of peace; the least
reflection must convince every candid mind that both these cases are totally
foreign to his purpose. Massachusetts raised a body of troops for six months,
at the expiration of which they were to disband ... ; this looks very little
like a standing army. But beside, was that commonwealth in a state of peace at
that time? So far from it, that they were in the most violent commotions and
contests, and their legislature had formally declared that an unnatural
rebellion existed within the state. The situation of Pennsylvania was similar;
a number of armed men had levied war against the authority of the state and
openly avowed their intention of withdrawing their allegiance from it. To what
purpose examples are brought, of states raising troops for short periods in
times of war or insurrections, on a question concerning the propriety of keeping
up standing armies in times of peace, the public must judge.
It is further said, that no danger can arise from this power being lodged in
the hands of the general government, because the legislatures will be a check
upon them, to prevent their abusing it.
This is offered, as what force there is in it will hereafter receive a more
particular examination. At present, I shall only remark, that it is difficult
to conceive how the state legislatures can, in any case, hold a check over the
general legislature, in a constitutional way. The latter has, in every instance
to which their powers extend, complete control over the former. The state
legislatures can, in no case-by law, resolution, or otherwise of right, prevent
or impede the general government, from enacting any law, or executing it, which
this constitution authorizes them to enact or execute. If then the state
legislatures check the general legislature, it must be by exciting the people to
resist constitutional laws. In this way every individual, or every body of men,
may check any government, in proportion to the influence they may have over the
body of the people. But such kinds of checks as these, though they sometimes
correct the abuses of government, [more) often destroy all government.
It is further said, that no danger is to be apprehended from the exercise of
this power, because it is lodged in the hands of representatives of the people.
If they abuse it, it is in the power of the people to remove them, and choose
others who will pursue their interests.... That it is unwise in any people, to
authorize their rulers to do, what, if done, would prove injurious-I have, in
some former numbers, shown. . . . The representation in the proposed government
will be a mere shadow without the substance. I am so confident that I am well
founded in this opinion, that I am persuaded if it was to be adopted or
rejected, upon a fair discussion of its merits without taking into contemplation
circumstances extraneous to it, as reasons for its adoption, nineteen-twentieths
of the sensible men in the union would reject it on this account alone; unless
its powers were confined to much fewer objects than it embraces.
BRUTUS
Antifederalist Number 26
The use of coercion by the new government (part 1)
A FARMER AND PLANTER had his work printed in The Maryland
Journal, and Baltimore Advertiser, April 1, 1788.
The time is nearly at hand, when you are called upon to render up that
glorious liberty you obtained, by resisting the tyranny and oppression of George
the Third, King of England, and his ministers. The first Monday in April is the
day appointed by our assembly, for you to meet and choose delegates in each
county, to take into consideration the new Federal Government, and either adopt
or refuse it. Let me entreat you, my fellows, to consider well what you are
about. Read the said constitution, and consider it well before you act. I have
done so, and can find that we are to receive but little good, and a great deal
of evil. Aristocracy, or government in the hands of a very few nobles, or RICH
MEN, is therein concealed in the most artful wrote plan that ever was formed to
entrap a free people. The contrivers of it have so completely entrapped you,
and laid their plans so sure and secretly, that they have only left you to do
one of two things-that is either to receive or refuse it. And in order to bring
you into their snare, you may daily read new pieces published in the newspapers,
in favor of this new government; and should a writer dare to publish any piece
against it, he is immediately abused and vilified.
Look round you and observe well the RICH MEN, who are to be your only
rulers, lords and masters in future! Are they not all for it? Yes! Ought not
this to put you on your guard? Does not riches beget power, and power,
oppression and tyranny?
I am told that four of the richest men in Ann-Arundel County [Maryland],
have offered themselves candidates to serve in the convention, who are all in
favor of the new Federal Government. Let me beg of you to reflect a moment on
the danger you run. If you choose these men, or others like them, they certainly
will do everything in their power to adopt the new government. Should they
succeed, your liberty is gone forever; and you will then be nothing better than
a strong ass crouching down between two burdens. The new form of government
gives Congress liberty at any time, by their laws, to alter the state laws, and
the time, places and manner of holding elections for representatives. By this
clause they may command, by their laws, the people of Maryland to go to Georgia,
and the people of Georgia to go to Boston, to choose their representatives.
Congress, or our future lords and masters, are to have power to lay and collect
taxes, duties, imposts, and excises. Excise is a new thing in America, and few
country farmers and planters know the meaning of it. But it is not so in Old
England, where I have seen the effects of it, and felt the smart. It is there a
duty, or tax, laid upon almost every necessary of life and convenience, and a
great number of other articles. The excise on salt in the year 1762, to the
best of my recollection, in England, was 4s. sterling per bushel, for all that
was made use of in families; and the price of salt per bushel about 6s.
sterling, and the excise 4s.6d. on every gallon of rum made use of. If a
private family make their own soap, candles, beer, cider, etc., they pay an
excise duty on them. And if they neglect calling in an excise officer at the
time of making these things, they are liable to grievous fines and forfeitures,
besides a long train of evils and inconveniences attending this detestable
excise-to enumerate particularly would fill a volume. The excise officers have
power to enter your houses at all times, by night or day, and if you refuse them
entrance, they can, under pretense of searching for exciseable goods, that the
duty has not been paid on, break open your doors, chests, trunks, desks, boxes,
and rummage your houses from bottom to top. Nay, they often search the clothes,
petticoats and pockets of ladies or gentlemen (particularly when they are coming
from on board an East-India ship), and if they find any the least article that
you cannot prove the duty to be paid on, seize it and carry it away with them;
who are the very scum and refuse of mankind, who value not their oaths, and will
break them for a shilling. This is their true character in England, and I speak
from experience, for I have had the opportunity of putting their virtue to the
test, and saw two of them break their oath for one guinea, and a third for one
shilling's worth of punch. What do you think of a law to let loose such a set
of vile officers among you! Do you expect the Congress excise-officers will be
any better-if God, in his anger, should think it proper to punish us for our
ignorance, and sins of ingratitude to him, after carrying us through the late
war, and giving us liberty, and now so tamely to give it up by adopting this
aristocratical government?
Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several
states which may be included within this union according to their respective
numbers. This seems to imply, that we shall be taxed by the poll again, which
is contrary to our Bill of Rights. But it is possible that the rich men, who
are the great land holders, will tax us in this manner, which will exempt them
from paying assessments on their great bodies of land in the old and new parts
of the United States; many of them having but few taxable by the poll. Our
great Lords and Masters are to lay taxes, raise and support armies, provide a
navy, and may appropriate money for two years, call forth the militia to execute
their laws, suppress insurrections, and the President is to have the command of
the militia. Now, my countrymen, I would ask you, why are all these things
directed and put into their power? Why, I conceive, they are to keep you in a
good humor; and if you should, at any time, think you are imposed upon by
Congress and your great Lords and Masters, and refuse or delay to pay your
taxes, or do anything that they shall think proper to order you to do, they can,
and I have not a doubt but they will, send the militia of Pennsylvania, Boston,
or any other state or place, to cut your throats, ravage and destroy your
plantations, drive away your cattle and horses, abuse your wives, kill your
infants, and ravish your daughters, and live in free quarters, until you get
into a good humor, and pay all that they may think proper to ask of you, and you
become good and faithful servants and slaves.(1) Such things have been done, and
I have no doubt will be done again, if you consent to the adoption of this new
Federal Government. You labored under many hardships while the British
tyrannized over you! You fought, conquered and gained your liberty-then keep
it, I pray you, as a precious jewel. Trust it not out of your own hands; be
assured, if you do, you will never more regain it. The train is laid, the match
is on fire, and they only wait for yourselves to put it to the train, to blow up
all your liberty and commonwealth governments, and introduce aristocracy and
monarchy, and despotism will follow of course in a few years. Four-years
President will be in time a King for life; and after him, his son, or he that
has the greatest power among them, will be King also. View your danger, and
find out good men to represent you in convention-men of your own profession and
station in life; men who will not adopt this destructive and diabolical form of
a federal government. There are many among you that will not be led by the nose
by rich men, and would scorn a bribe. Rich men can live easy under any
government, be it ever so tyrannical. They come in for a great share of the
tyranny, because they are the ministers of tyrants, and always engross the
places of honor and profit, while the greater part of the common people are led
by the nose, and played about by these very men, for the destruction of
themselves and their class. Be wise, be virtuous, and catch the precious moment
as it passes, to refuse this newfangled federal government, and extricate
yourselves and posterity from tyranny, oppression, aristocratical or monarchical
government.
A FARMER AND PLANTER
(1) See the history of the confederate Grecian states-also the history ofEngland, for the massacre of the people in the valley of Glenco, in the time ofWilliam the Third. [Note by "A Farmer and Planter".]
Antifederalist Number 27
The use of coercion by the new government (part 2)
JOHN HUMBLE's following piece was published in the Independent
Gazetteer, October 29, 1787.
The humble address of the low-born of the United States of America, to their
fellow slaves scattered throughout the world-greeting:
Whereas it hath been represented unto us that a most dreadful disease hath
for these five years last past infected, preyed upon and almost ruined the
government and people of this our country; and of this malady we ourselves have
had perfect demonstration, not mentally, but bodily, through every one of the
five senses. For although our sensations in regard to the mind be not just so
nice as those of the well born, yet our feeling, through the medium of the plow,
the hoe and the grubbing ax, is as acute as any nobleman's in the world. And,
whereas, a number of skillful physicians having met together at Philadelphia
last summer, for the purpose of exploring, and, if possible, removing the cause
of this direful disease, have, through the assistance of John Adams, Esq., in
the profundity of their great political knowledge, found out and discovered that
nothing but a new government, consisting of three different branches, namely,
king, lords, and commons or, in the American language, President, Senate and
Representatives-can save this, our country, from inevitable destruction. And,
whereas, it has been reported that several of our low-born brethren have had the
horrid audacity to think for themselves in regard to this new system of
government, and, dreadful thought! have wickedly begun to doubt concerning the
perfection of this evangelical constitution, which our political doctors have
declared to be a panacea, which (by inspiration) they know will infallibly heal
every distemper in the confederation, and finally terminate in the salvation of
America.
Now we the low born, that is, all the people of the United States, except
600 thereabouts, well born, do by this our humble address, declare and most
solemnly engage, that we will allow and admit the said 600 well born,
immediately to establish and confirm this most noble, most excellent and truly
divine constitution. And we further declare that without any equivocation or
mental reservation whatever we will support and maintain the same according to
the best of our power, and after the manner and custom of all other slaves in
foreign countries, namely by the sweat and toil of our body. Nor will we at any
future period of time ever attempt to complain of this our royal government, let
the consequences be what they may.
And although it appears to us that a standing army, composed of the purgings
of the jails of Great Britain, Ireland and Germany, shall be employed in
collecting the revenues of this our king and government, yet, we again in the
most solemn manner declare, that we will abide by our present determination of
non- resistance and passive obedience-so that we shall not dare to molest or
disturb those military gentlemen in the service of our royal government. And
(which is not improbable) should any one of those soldiers when employed on duty
in collecting the taxes, strike off the arm (with his sword) of one of our
fellow slaves, we will conceive our case remarkably fortunate if he leaves the
other arm on. And moreover, because we are aware that many of our fellow slaves
shall be unable to pay their taxes, and this incapacity of theirs is a just
cause of impeachment of treason; wherefore in such cases we will use our utmost
endeavors, in conjunction with the standing army, to bring such atrocious
offenders before our federal judges, who shall have power, without jury or
trial, to order the said miscreants for immediate execution; nor will we think
their sentence severe unless after being hanged they are also to be both
beheaded and quartered. And finally we shall henceforth and forever leave all
power, authority and dominion over our persons and properties in the hands of
the well born, who were designed by Providence to govern. And in regard to the
liberty of the press, we renounce all claim to it forever more, Amen; and we
shall in future be perfectly contented if our tongues be left us to lick the
feet of our well born masters.
Done on behalf of three millions of low-born American slaves.
JOHN HUMBLE, Secretary
Antifederalist Number 28
The use of coercion by the new government (part iii)
This essay was published in either the (Philadelphia) Freeman's
Journal; or, The North-American Intelligencer, January 16, 1788.
The Congress under the new Constitution have the power "of organizing,
arming and disciplining the militia, and of governing them when in the service
of the United States, giving to the separate States the appointment of the
officers and the authority of training the militia according to the discipline
prescribed by Congress." Let us inquire why they have assumed this great
power. Was it to strengthen the power which is now lodged in your hands, and
relying upon you and you solely for aid and support to the civil power in the
execution of all the laws of the new Congress? Is this probable? Does the
complexion of this new plan countenance such a supposition? When they
unprecedently claim the power of raising and supporting armies, do they tell you
for what purposes they are to be raised? How they are to be employed? How many
they are to consist of, and where to be stationed? Is this power fettered with
any one of those restrictions, which will show they depend upon the militia, and
not upon this infernal engine of oppression to execute their civil laws? The
nature of the demand in itself contradicts such a supposition, and forces you to
believe that it is for none of these causes-but rather for the purpose of
consolidating and finally destroying your strength, as your respective
governments are to be destroyed. They well know the impolicy of putting or
keeping arms in the hands of a nervous people, at a distance from the seat of a
government, upon whom they mean to exercise the powers granted in that
government. They have no idea of calling upon or trusting to the party
aggrieved to support and enforce their own grievances, (notwithstanding they may
select and subject them to as strict subordination as regular troops) unless
they have a standing army to back and compel the execution of their orders. It
is asserted by the most respectable writers upon government, that a well
regulated militia, composed of the yeomanry of the country, have ever been
considered as the bulwark of a free people. Tyrants have never placed any
confidence on a militia composed of freemen. Experience has taught them that a
standing body of regular forces, whenever they can be completely introduced, are
always efficacious in enforcing their edicts, however arbitrary; and slaves by
profession themselves, are "nothing loth" to break down the barriers
of freedom with a gout. No, my fellow citizens, this plainly shows they do not
mean to depend upon the citizens of the States alone to enforce their powers.
They mean to lean upon something more substantial and summary. They have left
the appointment of officers in the breasts of the several States; but this
appears to me an insult rather than a privilege, for what avails this right if
they at their pleasure may arm or disarm all or any part of the freemen of the
United States, so that when their army is sufficiently numerous, they may put it
out of the power of the freemen militia of America to assert and defend their
liberties, however they might be encroached upon by Congress. Does any, after
reading this provision for a regular standing army, suppose that they intended
to apply to the militia in all cases, and to pay particular attention to making
them the bulwark of this continent? And would they not be equal to such an
undertaking? Are they not abundantly able to give security and stability to
your government as long as it is free? Are they not the only proper persons to
do it? Are they not the most respectable body of yeomanry in that character
upon earth? Have they not been engaged in some of the most brilliant actions in
America, and more than once decided the fate of princes? In short, do they not
preclude the necessity of any standing army whatsoever, unless in case of
invasion? And in that case it would be time enough to raise them, for no free
government under heaven, with a well disciplined militia, was ever yet subdued
by mercenary troops.
The advocates at the present day, for a standing army in the new Congress,
pretend it is necessary for the respectability of government. I defy them to
produce an instance in any country, in the Old or New World, where they have not
finally done away the liberties of the people. Every writer upon government--
Locke, Sidney, Hampden, and a list of others have uniformly asserted, that
standing armies are a solecism in any government; that no nation ever supported
them, that did not resort to, rely upon, and finally become a prey to them. No
western historians have yet been hardy enough to advance principles that look a
different way. What historians have asserted, all the Grecian republics have
verified. They are brought up to obedience and unconditional submission; with
arms in their bands, they are taught to feel the weight of rigid discipline;
they are excluded from the enjoyments which liberty gives to its votaries; they,
in consequence, hate and envy the rest of the community in which they are
placed, and indulge a malignant pleasure in destroying those privileges to which
they never can be admitted. "Without a standing army," (says the
Marquis of Beccaria), "in every society there is an effort constantly
tending to confer on one part the height and to reduce the other to the extreme
of weakness, and this is of itself sufficient to employ the people's attention."
There is no instance of any government being reduced to a confirmed tyranny
without military oppression. And the first policy of tyrants has been to
annihilate all other means of national activity and defense, when they feared
opposition, and to rely solely upon standing troops. Repeated were the trials,
before the sovereigns of Europe dared to introduce them upon any pretext
whatever; and the whole record of the transactions of mankind cannot furnish an
instance, (unless the proposed constitution may be called part of that record)
where the motives which caused that establishment were not completely disguised.
Peisistratus in Greece, and Dionysius in Syracuse, Charles in France, and Henry
in England, all cloaked their villainous intentions under an idea of raising a
small body as a guard for their persons; and Spain could not succeed in the same
nefarious plan, until thro' the influence of an ambitious priest (who have in
all countries and in all ages, even at this day, encouraged and preached up
arbitrary power) they obtained it. "Caesar, who first attacked the
commonwealth with mines, very soon opened his batteries." Notwithstanding
all these objections to this engine of oppression, which are made by the most
experienced men, and confirmed by every country where the rays of freedom ever
extended-yet in America, which has hitherto been her favorite abode; in this
civilized territory, where property is so valuable, and men are found with
feelings that win not patiently submit to arbitrary control; in this western
region, where, my fellow countrymen, it is confessedly proper that you should
associate and dwell in society from choice and reflection, and not be kept
together by force and fear-you are modestly requested to engraft into the
component parts of your constitution a Standing Army, without any qualifying
restraints whatever, certainly to exist somewhere in the bowels of your country
in time of peace. It is very true that Lawyer [James] Wilson-member of the
Federal Convention, and who we may suppose breathes in some measure the spirit
of that body-tells you it is for the purpose of forming cantonments upon your
frontiers, and for the dignity and safety of your country, as it respects
foreign nations. No man that loves his country could object to their being
raised for the first of these causes, but for the last it cannot be necessary.
God has so separated us by an extensive ocean from the rest of mankind; he hath
so liberally endowed us with privileges, and so abundantly taught us to esteem
them precious, it would be impossible while we retain our integrity, and advert
to first principles, for any nation whatever to subdue us. We have succeeded in
our opposition to the most powerful people upon the globe; and the wound that
America received in the struggle, where is it? As speedily healed as the track
in the ocean is buried by the succeeding wave. It has scarcely stopped her
progress, and our private dissensions only, at this moment, tarnish the lustre
of the most illustrious infant nation under heaven.
You cannot help suspecting this gentleman [James Wilson], when he goes on to
tell you "that standing armies in time of peace have always been a topic of
popular declamation, but Europe hath found them necessary to maintain the
appearance of strength in a season of the most profound tranquility." This
shows you his opinion-and that he, as one of the Convention, was for
unequivocally establishing them in time of peace; and to object to them, is a
mere popular declamation. But I will not, my countrymen-I cannot believe you to
be of the same sentiment. Where is the standing army in the world that, like
the musket they make use of, hath been in time of peace brightened and burnished
for the sake only of maintaining an appearance of strength, without being put to
a different use-without having had a pernicious influence upon the morals, the
habits, and the sentiments of society, and finally, taking a chief part in
executing its laws?
If tyranny is at all feared, the tyranny of the many is to be guarded
against MORE than that of a single person. The Athenians found by sad
experience, that 30 tyrants were thirty times worse than one. A bad aristocracy
is thirty times worse than a bad monarchy, allowing each to have a standing army
as unrestricted as in the proposed constitution.
If the people are not in general disposed to execute the powers of
government, it is time to suspect there is something wrong in that government;
and rather than employ a standing army, they had better have another. For, in
my humble opinion, it is yet much too early to set it down for a fact, that
mankind cannot be governed but by force.
Antifederalist Number 29
Objections to national control of the militia
A DEMOCRATIC FEDERALIST appeared in "the Pennsylvania Packet," October 23, 1787; following #29, #30 is excerpted from THE ADDRESS AND REASONS OF DISSENT OF THE MINORITY OF THE CONVENTION OF THE STATE OF
PENNSYLVANIA TO THEIR CONSTITUENTS, December 12, 1787.
Hume, an aristocratical writer, has candidly confessed that an army is a
moral distemper in a government, of which it must at last inevitably perish (2d
Burgh, 349); and the Earl of Oxford (Oxford the friend of France and the
Pretender, the attainted Oxford), said in the British parliament, in a speech on
the mutiny bill, that, "While he had breath he would speak for the
liberties of his country, and against courts martial and a standing army in
peace, as dangerous to the Constitution." (Ibid., page 455.) Such were the
speeches even of the enemies of liberty when Britain had yet a right to be
called free. But, says Mr. [James] Wilson, "It is necessary to maintain
the appearance of strength even in times of the most profound tranquillity."
And what is this more than a threadbare hackneyed argument, which has been
answered over and over in different ages, and does not deserve even the smallest
consideration? Had we a standing army when the British invaded our peaceful
shores? Was it a standing army that gained the battles of Lexington and Bunker
Hill, and took the ill-fated Burgoyne? Is not a well- regulated militia
sufficient for every purpose of internal defense? And which of you, my fellow
citizens, is afraid of any invasion from foreign powers that our brave militia
would not be able immediately to repel?
Mr. Wilson says, that he does not know of any nation in the world which has
not found it necessary to maintain the appearance of strength in a season of the
most profound tranquillity. If by this equivocal assertion he has meant to say
that there is no nation in the world without a standing army in time of peace,
he has been mistaken. I need only adduce the example of Switzerland, which,
like us, is a republic, whose thirteen cantons, like our thirteen States, are
under a federal government, and which besides is surrounded by the most powerful
nations in Europe, all jealous of its liberty and prosperity. And yet that
nation has preserved its freedom for many ages, with the sole help of a militia,
and has never been known to have a standing army, except when in actual war.
Why should we not follow so glorious an example; and are we less able to defend
our liberty without an army, than that brave but small nation which, with its
militia alone has hitherto defied all Europe?
A DEMOCRATIC FEDERALIST
The framers of this constitution appear to have been . . . sensible that no
dependence could be placed on the people for their support; but on the contrary,
that the government must be executed by force. They have therefore made a
provision for this purpose in a permanent standing army and a militia that may
be objected to as strict discipline and government.
A standing army in the hands of a government placed so independent of the
people, may be made a fatal instrument to overturn the public liberties; it may
be employed to enforce the collection of the most oppressive taxes; and to carry
into execution the most arbitrary measures. An ambitious man who may have the
army at his devotion, may step up into the throne, and seize upon absolute
power.
The absolute unqualified command that Congress have over the militia may be
made instrumental to the destruction of all liberty both public and private;
whether of a personal, civil or religious nature.
First, the personal liberty of every man, probably from sixteen to sixty
years of age, may be destroyed by the power Congress have in organizing and
governing of the militia. As militia they may be subjected to fines to any
amount, levied in a military manner; they may be subjected to corporal
punishments of the most disgraceful and humiliating kind; and to death itself,
by the sentence of a court martial. To this our young men will be more
immediately subjected, as a select militia, composed of them, will best answer
the purposes of government.
Secondly, the rights of conscience may be violated, as there is no exemption
of those persons who are conscientiously scrupulous of hearing arms. These
compose a respectable proportion of the community in the State [Pennsylvania].
This is the more remarkable, because even when the distresses of the late war
and the evident disaffection of many citizens of that description inflamed our
passions, and when every person who was obliged to risk his own life must have
been exasperated against such as on any account kept back from the common
danger, yet even then, when outrage and violence might have been expected, the
rights of conscience were held sacred.
At this momentous crisis, the framers of our State Constitution made the
most express and decided declaration and stipulations in favor of the rights of
conscience; but now, when no necessity exists, those dearest rights of men are
left insecure.
Thirdly, the absolute command of Congress over the militia may be
destructive of public liberty; for under the guidance of an arbitrary
government, they may be made the unwilling instruments of tyranny. The militia
of Pennsylvania may be marched to New England or Virginia to quell an
insurrection occasioned by the most galling oppression, and aided by the
standing army, they will no doubt be successful in subduing their liberty and
independency. But in so doing, although the magnanimity of their minds will be
extinguished, yet the meaner passions of resentment and revenge will be
increased, and these in turn will be the ready and obedient instruments of
despotism to enslave the others; and that with an irritated vengeance. Thus may
the militia be made the instruments of crushing the last efforts of expiring
liberty, of riveting the chains of despotism on their fellow-citizens, and on
one another. This power can be exercised not only without violating the
Constitution, but in strict conformity with it; it is calculated for this
express purpose, and will doubtless be executed accordingly.
As this government will not enjoy the confidence of the people, but be
executed by force, it will be a very expensive and burdensome government. The
standing army must be numerous, and as a further support, it wilt be the policy
of this government to multiply officers in every department; judges, collectors,
tax-gatherers, excisemen and the whole host of revenue officers, will swarm over
the land, devouring the hard earnings of the industrious like the locusts of
old, impoverishing and desolating all before them.
Antifederalist Number 30-31
A Virginia Antifederalist on the Issue of Taxation
From The Freeman's Journal; or, The North-American Intelligencer,
October 31, 1787.
It has been the language, since the peace, of the most virtuous and
discerning men in America, that the powers vested in Congress were inadequate to
the procuring of the benefits that should result from the union. It was found
that our national character was sinking in the opinion of foreign nations, and
that the selfish views of some of the states were likely to become the source of
dangerous jealousy. The requisitions of Congress were set at naught; the
government, that represented the union, had not a shilling in its treasury to
enable it to pay off the federal debts, nor had it any method within its power
to alter its situation. It could make treaties of commerce, but could not
enforce the observance of them; and it was felt that we were suffering from the
restrictions of foreign nations, who seeing the want of energy in our federal
constitution, and the unlikelihood of cooperation in thirteen separate
legislatures, had shackled our commerce, without any dread of recrimination on
our part. To obviate these grievances, it was I believe the general opinion,
that new powers should be vested in Congress to enable it, in the amplest
manner, to regulate the commerce, to lay and collect duties on the imports of
the United States. Delegates were appointed by most of them, for those
purposes, to a convention to be held at Annapolis in the September before last.
A few of them met, and without waiting for the others, who were coming on, they
dissolved the convention-after resolving among themselves, that the powers
vested in them were not sufficiently extensive; and that they would apply to the
legislatures of the several states, which they represented, to appoint members
to another convention, with powers to new model the federal constitution. This,
indeed, it has now done in the most unequivocal manner; nor has it stopped here,
for it has fairly annihilated the constitution of each individual state. It has
proposed to you a high prerogative government, which, like Aaron's serpent, is
to swallow up the rest. This is what the thinking people in America were
apprehensive of. They knew how difficult it is to hit the golden mean, how
natural the transition is from one extreme to another-from anarchy to tyranny,
from the inconvenient laxity of thirteen separate governments to the too sharp
and grinding one, before which our sovereignty, as a state, was to vanish.
In Art. I, Sect. 8, of the proposed constitution, it is said, "Congress
shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises."
Are you then, Virginians, about to abandon your country to the depredations of
excisemen, and the pressure of excise laws? Did it ever enter the mind of any
one of you, that you could live to see the day, that any other government but
the General Assembly of Virginia should have power of direct taxation in this
state? How few of you ever expected to see excise laws, those instruments of
tyranny, in force in your country? But who could imagine, that any man but a
Virginian, were they found to be necessary, would ever have a voice towards
enacting them? That any tribunal, but the courts of Virginia, would be allowed
to take cognizance of disputes between her citizens and their tax gatherers and
excisemen? And that, if ever it should be found necessary to curse this land
with these hateful excisemen, any one, but a fellow citizen, should be entrusted
with that office?
For my part, I cannot discover the necessity there was of allowing Congress
to subject us to excise laws, unless-that considering the extensiveness of the
single republic into which this constitution would collect all the others, and
the well known difficulty of governing large republics with harmony and ease-it
was thought expedient to bit our mouths with massive curbs, to break us, bridled
with excise laws and managed by excisemen, into an uniform, sober pace, and
thus, gradually, tame the troublesome mettle of freemen. This necessity could
not, surely, arise from the desire of furnishing Congress with a sufficient
revenue to enable it to exercise the prerogatives which every friend to America
would wish to see vested in it. As it would, by unanimous consent, have the
management of the impost, it could increase it to any amount, and this would
fall sufficiently uniform on every one, according to his ability. Or, were this
not found sufficient, could not the deficiency be made up by requisitions to the
states? Could it not have been made an article of the federal constitution,
that, if any of them refused their quota, Congress may be allowed to make it up
by an increase of the impost on that particular state so refusing? This would,
surely, be a sufficient security to Congress, that their requisitions would be
punctually complied with.
In any dispute between you and the revenue officers and excisemen of
Congress, it is true that it is provided the trial shall be in the first
instance within the state, though before a federal tribunal. It is said in par.
3, sect. 2, art. 3, "The trial of all crimes except in cases of
impeachments shall be by jury; and such trial shall be held in the state where
the crime shall be committed." But what does this avail, when an appeal
will lie against you to the supreme federal court. In the paragraph preceding
the one just now quoted, it is said, "In all cases affecting ambassadors,
other public ministers and consuls, and those in which a state shall be a party,
the Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction. In all the other cases
before mentioned, the Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction, both as
to law and fact, with such exceptions and under such regulations as the Congress
shall make." But where is this Supreme Court to sit? Will it not be where
Congress shall fix its residence? Thither then you will be carried for trial.
Who are to be your jury? Is there any provision made that you shall have a
Venire from your county, or even from your state, as they please to call it?
Not You are to be tried within the territory of Congress, and Congress itself is
to be a party. You are to be deprived of the benefit of a jury from your
vicinage, that boast and birthright of a freeman.
Should it not at least have been provided, that those revenue officers and
excisemen-against whom free governments have always justly entertained a
jealousy-should be citizens of the state? Was it inadmissible that they should
be endued with the bowels of fellow citizens? Are we not to expect that New
England will now send us revenue officers instead of onions and apples? When
you observe that the few places already under Congress in this state are in the
hands of strangers, you will own that my suspicion is not without some
foundation. And if the first cause of it be required, those who have served in
Congress can tell you that the New England delegates to that assembly have
always stood by each other, and have formed a firm phalanx, which the southern
delegates have not; that, on the contrary, the maneuvers of the former have been
commonly engaged, with success, in dividing the latter against each other.
CATO UTICENSIS
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