American Government and PoliticsMacmillan, 1910 - 772 pages |
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... AND FINANCE XIX . THE REGULATION OF COMMERCE XX . NATURAL RESOURCES XXI . THE GOVERNMENT of Territories · · 267 294 • · • 315 342 358 379 • · • 401 • • 417 CHAPTER PART III STATE GOVERNMENT XXII . THE CONSTITUTIONAL BASIS vii.
... AND FINANCE XIX . THE REGULATION OF COMMERCE XX . NATURAL RESOURCES XXI . THE GOVERNMENT of Territories · · 267 294 • · • 315 342 358 379 • · • 401 • • 417 CHAPTER PART III STATE GOVERNMENT XXII . THE CONSTITUTIONAL BASIS vii.
Page 34
... Jefferson that " man was a rational animal endowed by nature with rights and with an innate sense of justice and that he could be restrained from wrong and protected in right by moderate 34 THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION.
... Jefferson that " man was a rational animal endowed by nature with rights and with an innate sense of justice and that he could be restrained from wrong and protected in right by moderate 34 THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION.
Page 37
... natural dislike of states to pay direct contributions in a lump sum to a distant central govern- ment a dislike which Bismarck discovered long afterward in his experience with the matricular contributions in the German Empire ...
... natural dislike of states to pay direct contributions in a lump sum to a distant central govern- ment a dislike which Bismarck discovered long afterward in his experience with the matricular contributions in the German Empire ...
Page 41
... natural resources at its command , a more inadequate instrument could scarcely be imagined ; and the gravity of the situation was all the more serious because the Articles required the consent of every state to the slightest amend- ment ...
... natural resources at its command , a more inadequate instrument could scarcely be imagined ; and the gravity of the situation was all the more serious because the Articles required the consent of every state to the slightest amend- ment ...
Page 44
... nature by their respective states , none of which , apparently , contemplated any very far - reaching changes . In fact , almost all of them expressly limited their representatives to a mere revision of the Articles of Confederation ...
... nature by their respective states , none of which , apparently , contemplated any very far - reaching changes . In fact , almost all of them expressly limited their representatives to a mere revision of the Articles of Confederation ...
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