| Alexander Hamilton - Finance - 1886 - 652 pages
...State governments. The more I revolve the subject, the more fully I am persuaded that the balance is much more likely to be disturbed by the preponderancy of the last than of the first scale. We have seen, in all the examples of ancient and modern confederacies, the strongest tendency continually... | |
| Stedman, Edmund C. and Hutchinson Ellen M. - 1888 - 566 pages
...State governments. The more I revolve the subject, the more fully I am persuaded that the balance is much more likely to be disturbed by the preponderancy of the last than of the first scale. We have seen, in all the examples of ancient and modern confederacies, the strongest tendency continually... | |
| Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, James Madison - United States - 1894 - 980 pages
...State Governments. The more I revolve the subject, the more fully I am persuaded that the balance is much more likely to be disturbed by the preponderancy of the last than of the first scale. We have seen in all the examples of ancient and modern confederacies, the strongest tendency continually... | |
| Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay - Constitutional law - 1901 - 520 pages
...State governments. The more I revolve the subject the more fully I am persuaded that the balance is much more likely to be disturbed by the preponderancy of the last than of the first scale. We have seen, in all the examples of ancient and modern confederacies, the strongest tendency continually... | |
| Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay - Constitutional law - 1901 - 536 pages
...State governments. The more I revolve the subject the more fully I am persuaded that the balance is much more likely to be disturbed by the preponderancy of the last than of the first scale. We have seen, in all the examples of ancient and modern confederacies, the strongest tendency continually... | |
| William Bennett Munro - Constitutional history - 1914 - 220 pages
...state governments. The more I revolve the subject, the more fully I am persuaded that the balance is much more likely to be disturbed by the preponderancy of the last than of the first scale. We have seen, in all the examples of ancient and modern confederacies, the strongest tendency continually... | |
| Constitutional law - 1920 - 560 pages
...state governments. The more I revolve the subject, the more fully I am persuaded that the balance is much more likely to be disturbed by the preponderancy of the last than of the first scale." Mr. Madison also declared that the state governments would have the advantage of the federal government... | |
| United States - 1922 - 740 pages
...whatever in the Government which rules and taxes them, makes the laws they must obey, and sends then* sons to battle. What is there in our scheme of government...divided as elsewhere between two powers, one Federal ana the other State. In other words: The object of this clause was to give Congress "the combined powers... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. District of Columbia - 1922 - 700 pages
...approved May 3, 1802, 2 Stat., p. 1!)5. expressed the view in the Federalist (Xo. XLIV) that the bnlance between the Federal and State governments " was much more likely to be disturbed by the preponderant-)- " of the latter than of the former. Manifestly, then, the way to preclude all possibility... | |
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