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| No | 66% | 206 votes | Total: 310 votes | |
| Yes | 34% | 104 votes |
No
Created on: March 01, 2011
The beauty of our system of government is federalism, the shared sovereignty of both state and national government; each is supreme in their own respects. Without the federal government, many of America’s most important accomplishments would have been lost.
Firstly look to pre-constitutional times, when the states were divided. Under the Articles of Confederation, each state was considered sovereign and the national government was week. The national government could not raise an army, tax citizens, or ratify treaties with foreign powers. It was up to the states to regulate their militias, collect taxes and decide on how much to give the national government, and formulate foreign policy. The result was disaster; the national government was worthless. In 1786, Shay’s Rebellion of Revolutionary War veterans shut down Massachusetts courts to prevent them from collecting on debts. The state government was overwhelmed by the rebellion and the national government was powerless to stop it. Shays Rebellion helped convince the public that we needed a stronger central government. During the Civil War, the southern confederation realized that its states could not fight the war as separate entities.
Clearly the Federal government can accomplish momentous undertakings. When Hitler launched his war on Europe, would the 50 states of America have risen to stop him? Together, as Americans, as a national force, the US can rise to meet a challenge. What if, after the Pearl Harbor Attack in 1941, only some of the states felt they needed to fight the Japanese? The very course of history would have been altered. The same goes for World War I and so on. When the Soviet Union spread its tentacles across the globe, where would a global force for capitalism and democracy come from? The United States of America can represent a moral force in the world, the 50 states, not so much.
Imagine the implications divided states would have had on domestic policy. The United States owes much of its economic productivity to its efficient national distribution infrastructure. Without the interstate highway system and federal funding on transportation infrastructure, the US would be full of small, sparsely connected roads and would resemble the roadways of Europe. Bottom line, the economics of a large nation work better than a collection of smaller entities. The US can operate by the laws of comparative advantage within its own borders. The North and Northern-Midwest can manufacture, South and Midwest produce agriculture, and West is abundant with raw materials. United there are so many more actions the national government can take.
Without national supremacy, issues like slavery and civil rights would not have been resolved when they were. On balance, the federal government has always been ahead of the states. While it is that true Montana gave women the right to vote before the 19th Amendment was ratified, Women would have remained disenfranchised for longer in other states if not for the federal government. Child Labor Laws, Social Security, Environmental Protection, Consumer Protection Acts – the list goes on forever. Even the development of the western states wouldn’t have happened without the aggressive force of manifest destiny and the idea of an American continent.
“E Plurbus Unum” – out of many, one; One United States of American that can rise to meet any challenge, Foreign or domestic.
Learn more about this author, Robert Daniel Smith II.
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Yes
Created on: August 19, 2009 Last Updated: August 20, 2009
The United States has always been more divided than united. Each state has its own laws. If you move to a different state you need to obtain another drivers license for that state. If you are in a professional field like being a Nurse, you have to take a state board exam for that state. If a person commits a crime in one state and crosses state lines, suddenly it becomes a federal offense. It is as if they have crossed another Country.
We are not restricted from traveling or moving from one state to another, but when law officials decide what is crime according to the state they are in, we have to go along with it. If a parent who does not have custody of their children, and takes them across state lines, it turns into a federal offense, and punishments are far worse than if the parent had stayed in the same state, from where they took the children.
It is all crazy and confusing. Each State has its own laws. Therefore how can they be united? If we are the "United" States of America, why are there so many different rules and laws for each individual state? When a person on social security moves to another state, there social security checks will simply be transfered. But their health insurance and food stamps will be cut off from the state they left from, and they have to re-apply for the services in the new state they moved to. They have to go through the entire process all over again.
This process can take weeks to complete. A person who needs medications, can die while waiting for the new insurance to kick in. They end up going to emergency rooms because, they can't afford to pay the cost of the medications.
Africa is a huge continent. They claim all the divided sections as individual countries. Only in America is this so complicated. The state and federal governments are separate, yet they are part of each other. We have federal prisons, and state prisons. The federal agencies trump the state agencies. State and federal law officials are in conflict with each other. They hold back information from each other to control a situation.
When the police are in pursuit of a criminal, they must stop at the state line, and let the police from the next state take over. That all sounds more like "The divided states of America." Would the US be better off as divided states? That is a weird question, because we ALREADY are!
Learn more about this author, Simonne Liberty.
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