The Constitution was not created by "the whole people" as the jurists have said; neither was it created by "the states" as Southern nullifiers long contended; but it was the work of a consolidated group whose interests knew no state boundaries and were... The Fortnightly Review - Page 3201913Full view - About this book
| Political science - 1913 - 756 pages
...interested in, and derived economic advantages from, the establishment of the new system "The Constitution was not created by 'the whole people' as the jurists have said; neither was it created by 'the States' as Southern nullifiers long contended; but it was the work of... | |
| Christian sociology - 1914 - 492 pages
...be the nation itself. His own final conclusion on this particular question is that the Constitution was not created by " the whole people " as the jurists have said, nor by the States, as Southern nullifiers long contended, but was the work of " a consolidated group whose interests knew... | |
| Allan Louis Benson - Constitutional history - 1914 - 214 pages
...interests on the one hand and the small farming and debtor interests on the other. " The Constitution was not created by ' the whole people' as the jurists have said; neither was it created by ' the States' as Southern nullifiers long contended; but it was the work... | |
| Allan Louis Benson - Constitutional history - 1914 - 198 pages
...interests on the one hand and the small farming and debtor interests on the other. " The Constitution was not created by ' the whole people ' as the jurists have said ; neither was it created by ' the States ' as Southern nullifiers long contended ; but it was the work... | |
| Edgar Eugene Robinson - Political parties - 1924 - 416 pages
...therefore, in a position to make their opinion of direct power in the government. " The Constitution was not created by 'the whole people' as the jurists have said; neither was it created by 'the states' as Southern nullifiers long contended; but it was the work of... | |
| Harold Underwood Faulkner - United States - 1924 - 752 pages
...more than onesixth of the adult males ratified it. As Professor Beard well says, "The Constitution was not created by 'the whole people,' as the jurists have said; neither was it created by 'the states,' as Southern nullifiers long contended; but it was the work... | |
| Edwin Arthur Burtt - Logic - 1928 - 620 pages
...interests on the one hand and the small farming and debtor interests on the other. The Constitution was not created by "the whole people" as the jurists have said; neither was it created by "the states" as Southern nullifiers long contended; but it was the work of... | |
| Samuel Duff McCoy - Biography & Autobiography - 1928 - 354 pages
...anterior to government and morally beyond the reach of popular majorities. . . . "The Constitution was not created by 'the whole people,' as the jurists have said ; neither was it created by 'the states,' as Southern nullifiers long contended; but it was the work... | |
| Military art and science - 1927 - 734 pages
...showed a decade ago, our Federal government, binding separate sovereign states into a single union, was not created by "the whole people," as the jurists...nullifiers long contended; but it was the work of a scattered, yet consolidated group whose interests knew no state boundaries and were truly national... | |
| Barbara Esposito, Lee Wood - Convict labor - 1982 - 233 pages
...concluded in his Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States, the "Constitution was not created by 'the whole people' as the jurists have said; neither was it created by 'the states' as Southern nullifiers long contended; but it was the work of... | |
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