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  1. Oct 20, 2021 · "The Federalist Papers defended the Constitution and its strong central government. The Anti-Federalist Papers represented the dissenting opinions of such important thinkers as Patrick Henry and John DeWitt, who saw threats in the Constitution to the rights and liberties so recently won from England.

  2. The Anti-Federalists especially advocated for the states’ rights and believed in shared powers among the states and the national government. The tenth amendment of the US constitution saw them reserve the others’ powers to the people and states. Regarding the same, the Anti-Federalist believed tyranny could only be limited if power was shared.

    • 1787; 236 years ago
    • Patriots
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  4. Apr 27, 2022 · English. 7 v. ; 25 cm. Includes bibliographical references. v. 1. What the anti-Federalists were for -- v. 2. Objections of non-signers of the Constitution and Major series of essays at the outset -- v. 3.

  5. The men who opposed the Constitution's unconditional ratification in 1787–1788 were called Anti-Federalists, although they claimed to be the true federalists and the true republicans. Contrary to common opinion, their major contribution to the American founding lies more in their critical examination of the new form of federalism and the new ...

  6. Jul 13, 2018 · The Anti-Federalists considered the Federalists to overstress devising governing structures that best control people and their potential worst impulses. By contrast, Anti-Federalist philosophy stressed that small self-governing republics served as natural fonts of virtue, and the abundance of virtue would exert sufficient control on individuals.

  7. May 11, 2018 · views 1,397,716 updated May 23 2018. Anti-Federalist Party Organized in 1792 to oppose the proposed Constitution of the United States, mainly on the grounds that it gave the central government power. Anti-Federalist leaders included Richard Henry Lee and Patrick Henry of Virginia, and George Clinton of New York.

  8. Consider the words of the Anti-Federalists in the “Dissent of the Pennsylvania Minority”: “[The people of the United States are asked] to consider of a constitution proposed by a convention of the United States, who were not appointed for the purpose of framing a new form of government, but whose powers were expressly confined to altering ...

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