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For example, here’s a 548-page CMS document that outlines specific rules for long-term-care facilities (nursing homes and residential homes for people with intellectual disabilities), which are ...
The Federalist Papers were written under the pseudonym Publius, but we know the authors were Hamilton, Madison and Jay. The Anti-Federalist Papers were written under pseudonyms as well, like ...
Contrary to Peter Berkowitz's "Why Colleges Don't Teach the Federalist Papers" (op-ed, May 7), the writings of John Jay, Alexander Hamilton and James Madison are indeed taught at top universities ...
Anti-Federalists felt a national government would not protect people far away from the Capitol; so they proposed 12 amendments to the Constitution, ten of which were ratified as the Bill of Rights.
Madison spent considerable energy in addressing the Anti-Federalist concern that a strong nation would usurp powers of the states and result in tyranny. While elaborating on it in Federalist Paper ...
In this episode of Constitutionally Speaking, Jay and Luke finish their discussion of the Anti-Federalists by asking: What did they get right? The Bill of Rights is a great achievement, a kind of ...
Whereas the Federalists believed accountability and good governance would be best realized if citizens are kept at a distance from government, the Anti-Federalists believed republican accountability ...
Keith L. Dougherty, An Empirical Test of Federalist and Anti-Federalist Theories of State Contributions, 1775-1783, Social Science History, Vol. 33, No. 1 (Spring, 2009), pp. 47-74 ...
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