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I'll post some things that the robot told me:
Below is a high-density reconstruction of what broke in the 1780s and who argued about it.
The Articles of Confederation created a league of sovereign states, not a governing state:
This made collective action nearly impossible.
Manifestation:
States behaved like semi-independent countries:
Elite interpretation:
“If a state collapses internally, the union cannot act.”
This terrified property-holders and bondholders.
The 1780s were perceived (by elites) as:
An unstable confederation sliding toward disunion or populist collapse
This is the pressure context behind 1787.
The Anti-Federalists argued:
Many of these warnings map exactly onto modern critiques.
Not a party; a coalition:
They were strongest in:
The Federalists argued:
Key figures:
Their writings (e.g. The Federalist Papers) dominate later interpretation because they won.
Beyond the binary:
These experiences directly informed both camps.
Heavily cited by both sides:
The disagreement was diagnostic, not philosophical.
I'll post some things that the robot told me:
Below is a high-density reconstruction of what broke in the 1780s and who argued about it.
(a) State coordination failures under the Articles of Confederation(a) State coordination failures under the Articles of Confederation
Structural causeStructural cause
The Articles of Confederation created a league of sovereign states, not a governing state:
This made collective action nearly impossible.
1. Fiscal collapse (national + state)1. Fiscal collapse (national + state)
Manifestation:
2. Interstate economic warfare2. Interstate economic warfare
States behaved like semi-independent countries:
Manifestation:
3. Inability to provide security3. Inability to provide security
Shays' Rebellion (1786–87)Shays' Rebellion (1786–87)
Elite interpretation:
This terrified property-holders and bondholders.
4. Foreign policy paralysis4. Foreign policy paralysis
Manifestation:
5. Legal incoherence5. Legal incoherence
Manifestation:
Net effectNet effect
The 1780s were perceived (by elites) as:
This is the pressure context behind 1787.
(b) What the Anti-Federalists argued, who they were, and who else mattered(b) What the Anti-Federalists argued, who they were, and who else mattered
Anti-Federalist critique (core themes)Anti-Federalist critique (core themes)
The Anti-Federalists argued:
Many of these warnings map exactly onto modern critiques.
Who were the Anti-Federalists?Who were the Anti-Federalists?
Not a party; a coalition:
They were strongest in:
Federalists (for contrast)Federalists (for contrast)
The Federalists argued:
Key figures:
Their writings (e.g. The Federalist Papers) dominate later interpretation because they won.
Who else was part of the discourse?Who else was part of the discourse?
Beyond the binary:
1. State constitutional thinkers1. State constitutional thinkers
These experiences directly informed both camps.
2. Classical & Enlightenment sources2. Classical & Enlightenment sources
Heavily cited by both sides:
The disagreement was diagnostic, not philosophical.
3. Popular press & pamphleteers3. Popular press & pamphleteers
Compressed synthesisCompressed synthesis