APEXVS Government (TEST 2.5.1) – Flashcards

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Explain how the Enlightenment and other historical events influenced the founders
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Enlightenment challenged The way people thought about government
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Key Enlightenment thinkers
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Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Descartes, Montesquieu, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Emmerich de Vattel, Voltaire
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Thomas Hobbes: main idea
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People are brutish, so they need a strong ruler
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Thomas Hobbes: main idea
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People are brutish, so they need a strong ruler
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John Locke: main idea
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People have natural rights that the government should protect
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Descartes: main idea
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You should be skeptical of what you see
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Montesquieu
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Government power should be divided into three branches
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Jean Jacques Rousseau
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People are naturally good, but bad government can chain them
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Emmerich de Vattel
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We can apply the laws of nature to nation, not just to people or objects
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Voltaire
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The right to free speech is more important than the content of the speech
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Compare the ideas of John Locke and Thomas Jefferson
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- both John Locke and Thomas Hobbes bro about the social contract that they imagined forming the first government

- Thomas Hobbes argued that life in the state of nature was "solitary, poor, nasty, Brutish, and short"

- John locked agreed that humans have natural rights that include " Life, liberty, and protection"
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Key events
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In order
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1760
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Georgia lll is crowned
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1763
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The proclamation of 1763
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1764 and 1765
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The sugar and stamp act
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1767
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Townshend act
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1770
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Boston massacre
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1773
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Intolerable act
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1775
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American revolution begins
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1776
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The declaration of independence
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1783
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The Treaty of Paris
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Describe the first government established in United States
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Formed a government under the articles of confederation
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shays rebellion
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Showed the need for a stronger central government
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Shays rebellion in chronological order (earliest to last)
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Find order
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Shays rebellion (4)
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Shayss supporters were elected to the Massachusetts legislature. The Massachusetts legislature repeated the taxes and stopped paying in debt
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Shays rebellion (3)
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The national government was unable to raise forces to put down Shayss rebellion
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Shays rebellion (2)
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Daniel shays Led a group of armed farmers who use the language of the American revolution against the Massachusetts legislauture
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Shays rebellion (1)
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The American Revolution left states deeply in debt
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Shays rebellion (5)
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Congress agreed to call a meeting " for the sole and express purpose of revisiting the articles of Confederation
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Good example of the influence of enlightenment ideas on state constitutions
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Natural rights - most states constitutions have a Bill of Rights
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The phone was not a weakness of the articles of Confederation
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It allowed each state to create its own foreign-policy
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Weakness of the articles of Confederation
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-It could not enforce its decisions

-it did not include executive and judicial branches

-it could not require States to contribute money to the national government
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Largest single influence of the American revolution
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The Enlightenment
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Document includes the phrase " we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all mean are created equal..."
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The Declaration of Independence
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Good examples of the influence of enlightenment ideas on state constitutions
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Popular sovereignty, Bill of Rights, separation of powers
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Explain why the constitutional convention was held
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To revise the articles of confederation
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Where was the meeting
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Annapolis, Maryland in 1786
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Who wrote the constitution
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Key framers :
George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and James Madison
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Several founders that skipped the convention
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Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, cereal Adams, Patrick Henry
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The great compromise
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Bicameral
Legislature is made up of two houses or chambers (trying to balance the need for big and small states)
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Three-fifths compromise
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Tried to balance the needs of slave and free states by making three-fifths of the slave population count toward representation
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Federalist and anti-federalist argued about
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Whether the constitution should be ratified
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Federalist
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Generally believe that the nation needs a stronger central government
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Anti-federalist
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Were afraid that the stronger government would become too powerful
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Constitution was ratified in
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1788
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Amendments became
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The bill of rights
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the anti-Federalist legacy was
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The bill of rights
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Constitution
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A written document that guides a nation
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Why were the Federalist papers written
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To support ratification of the Constitution
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Who were the main supporters of ratification of the Constitution
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Federalist
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The three-fifths compromise determine how population would be counted for
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Representation in Congress and also direct taxes on the population of the states
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The people who opposed the Constitution were called
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Anti-federalist
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Who was the father of the Constitution
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James Madison
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The three main parts of the constitution
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The preamble, the articles, and the amendments
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The five major principles of the Constitution
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Popular sovereignty, federalism, separation of powers, checks and balances, limited government
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The first part of the constitution is called
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Preamble
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Is followed by the main body also called the
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Articles
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Article l
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Legislative branch
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Article ll
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Executive branch
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Article lll
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Judicial branch
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Article lV (4)
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Relationship among states
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Article V (5)
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The amendment process
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Article Vl (6)
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Establishes the constitution as the supreme law of the land
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Article Vll (7)
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Ratification process
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There are 27 amendments
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Amendments
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The first 10 amendments are
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The bill of rights
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Articles
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Major parts of constitution
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How much of Congress must approve an amendment to the United States Congress before it is sent to states
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Two-thirds
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What power are set aside for the states or for the people
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Reserved power
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Judicial branch
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The branch of government responsible for interpreting law
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Legislative branch
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The branch is responsible for making laws
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Executive branch
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The bridge is responsible for enforcing the law
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delegates power
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Federal government
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Concurrent power
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Shared by the federal and state governments
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Reserved power
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State governments
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How do American federalism try to balance the power of the federal and state government
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Assigning delegated, reserved and concurrent power
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Implied power
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Those used to carry out the delegated power
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Inherent power
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Powers come from the basic nature of sovereign states
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Delegates powers
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- print money
- declare war
- establish post offices
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Concurrent powers
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- collect taxes
- build roads
- establish courts
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Reserved powers
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- issued license
- regulate intrastate businesses
- conduct elections
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The divisions of power include
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Reserved power, concurrent power, delegates power
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Federalism have gone through four major stages
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- Creative federalism

- dual federalism

- cooperative federalism

- New federalism
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Chronological order of federalism
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1790-1930: dual federalism

1932-1960: cooperation federalism

1960- 1980: creative federalism

1980- present: New federalism
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Dual federalism
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Power equally divided between state and federal
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Cooperation federalism
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National and state government collaborated
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Creative federalism
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Expanded federal involvement in local issues
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New federalism
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Give more power back to the states
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Constitution never explicitly list the powers to charter banks and corporations. Why did Alexander Hamilton argued the United States could still charter a bank
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He argued they are both implied and expressly enumerated powers, in that both types of power are delegated to The national government
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Grants-in aid
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To provide federal money for programs with local control
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Confederate
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A system of government in which the states have more of the power
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What does elastic clause do
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It allows the federal government to expand its power
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