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Sherr, Lynn.
Failure Is Impossible: Susan B. Anthony in Her Own Words.
New York: Random House, 1995.
Sirica
Sirica, John, J.
To Set the Record Straight: The Break-in, the Tapes, the Conspirators, the Pardon.
New York: Signet Books, 1979.
SJC
Carter, Jimmy. “Crisis of Confidence.” Speech delivered via television July 15, 1979.
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SJM
Wilson, James. Speech to the Pennsylvania Convention, November 24, 1787.
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SJW
SMLK
King, Martin Luther, Jr. “I Have a Dream.” Speech delivered at the Lincoln Memorial, August 28, 1963.
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(accessed April 20, 2007).
SPH
Henry, Patrick. “Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death.” Speech delivered before the Virginia House of Burgesses, March 23, 1775.
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SRN I
Nixon, Richard. “Acceptance of the Republican Party Nomination for President.” August 8, 1968.
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(accessed April 30, 2007).
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(accessed April 30, 2007).
SRN III
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Stone
Stone, Geoffrey R.
Perilous Times: Free Speech in Wartime, From the Sedition Act of 1789 to the War on Terrorism.
New York: Norton, 2004.
Suarez
Suarez, Ray.
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Sunstein
Sunstein, Cass R.
The Second Bill of Rights: FDR's Unfinished Resolution and Why We Need It More Than Ever
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SZ
Szatmary, David P.
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TFC
Farrand, Max.
The Framing of the Constitution of the United States.
London: Yale University Press, 1913.
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Jefferson, Thomas. “First Inaugural Address.” March 4, 1801.
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Time
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“Time for Healing.”
Time,
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Introduction: An Extraordinary Accomplishment
1 “America! America! God”: Bates, p. 3.
3 “a blank sheet”: Wheeler, p. 243.
3 “We have probably”: LWJ.
4 “If men were angels”: Federalist 51.
5 “conflict within consensus”: Kammen, p. 29.
6 “defined by blood”: Suarez, p. 2.
6 “more than any other leading democracy”: Bok, p. 397.
6 “Our conviction about American greatness”: Bennett, p. xiii.
6 “that the founders”: Kammen, p. 398.
8 “We had slavery”: SAL I.
10 “as too complex”: Wilson, p. 57.
11 “A republic, madam, if ”: Farrand III, p. 85.
11 “Liberty lies in the hearts”: Hand, p. 190.
15 “Whatever its merits”: FA, p. 127.
15 “an unqualified complaisance”: Federalist 71.
15 “the growth of a politics”: Frohnmayer, pp. 16â19.
17 “devised the most miraculous political document”: Bennett, p. xiv.
1. The More Fatal Problem Lies Among the
People Themselves
21 “A
people
is traveling”: L-XII.
21 “Experience has taught us”: LWJ.
23 “But what is government”: Federalist 51.
23 “one of the great utopian movements”: Wood II, p. 54.
24 “When virtue is”: Montesquieu, pp. 118â19.
24 “a quarrelsome, litigious, divisive lot”: Morgan, p. 4.
24 “almost as regularly”: Ibid.
25 “Were these colonies”: Ibid., p. 5.
25 “tameness and supineness”: L-X.
26 He certainly is”: L-I.
27â28 “My Dear Countrymen”: L-XII.
28 “Cancer . . . too deeply rooted”: Middlekauff, p. 313.
28â29 “We shall liberate”: Ibid., p. 245.
29 “a leap in the dark”: Ferling, p. 167.
29 “We have it”: PCS, p. 51.
29 “Youth is the seed time”: Ibid., p. 40.
31 “breathtaking boldness . . . separation”: LWTP, p. 2.
32 “We are young”: PCS, p. 40.
32 “Here Governments their last perfection take”: Wood II, p. 55.
32 “Would any Man”: Ibid., p. 92.
32â33 “If there is”: Ibid., p. 119.
33 “A spirit of Liberty”: Ibid., p. 102.
33 “sensible, hard-working, independent folk”: Bailyn II, p. 44.
33 “A firm adherence”: PCDR, Article XIV.
33 “As the possibility”: Wood II, p. 102.
34 “necessary evil . . . restraining our vices”: PCS, p. 3.
34 “The more simple”: Ibid., p. 5.
34 “occasion delay”: LHM.
34 “danger of an abuse”: Ibid.
35 “confidence that the justice”: Rakove II, p. 25.
35â36 “The Articles contained”: Rakove I, pp. 172â73.
36 “that tried men's souls”: LWTP, p. 50.
36 “Out of a population”: KY, p. 8.
36 “A country overflowing”: Ibid., p. 9.
36 “I wish I could say”: Martin, p. vii.
37â38 “While we lay here”: Ibid., pp. 87â89.
41 “regulators . . . moderating government”: SZ, p. 56.
42 “Who can determine”: Federalist 21.
42 “Leave them to themselves”: Ketcham, p. 186.
42 “regal powers”: SZ, p. 82.
42 “groaning under the intolerable burden”: East, p. 85.
42 “mistrust, the breakdown”: Wood II, p. 476.
43 “mistaken . . . sound policy”: Writings, p. 72.
43 “We have probably”: LWJ.
44 “Men love power” NDFC, pp.131â35.
44 “more fatal . . . lies”: Writings, p. 76.
44 “Experience has taught us”: LWJ.
44 “It is a just observation”: Federalist 71.
44 “Most men indeed”: Berkin, p. 163.
44 “united and actuated”: Federalist 10.
45 “So strong is”: Ibid.
45 “inflamed . . . with mutual animosity”: Ibid.
45 “mortified . . . dissipation . . . excessive jealousy . . . clashing interests”: Price, p. 151.
46 “What astonishing changes”: LWJ.
46 “It is evident”: Federalist 39.
46 “The citizens of the United States”: SJW.
46â47 “The American war”: Bailyn IV, p. 230.
47 “a republican remedy”: Federalist 10.
2. Approaching So Near to Perfection as
It Does
48 “Is it not time”: Federalist 6.
49 “approaching so near to perfection”: Farrand II, p. 642.
50 “Is it now time”: Federalist 6.
51 “the other inhabitants”: Ibid.
51 “ideas so different”: LFD.
51 “mutual concessions and sacrifices”: Elliot I, pp. 419â20.
51 “to secure the public good”: Federalist 10.
51 “it must do harm”: Ketcham, p. 190.
51â52 “Wise measures . . . to avert”: LWJ.
52 “There is no maxim”: Ketcham, p. 181.
52 “It is much more”: Wood II, p. 413.
53 “true history of the making”: Kammen, p. 184.
53 “I chose a seat”: Koch, p. 17.
54 “the profound politician”: Farrand III, p. 94.
54 “truth and lessons”: Koch, p. xxii.
55 “Where we see”: Ketcham, p. 184.
55 “The treasures of knowledge”: Wood I, p. 16.
55 “expressed a doubt”: Farrand I, p. 34.
56 “pivot”: Federalist 63.
56 “the executive and judicial powers”: Wood II, p. 598.
56 “The separation of this governmental power”: Ibid., p. 608.
56â57 “policy of supplying”: Federalist 51.
57 “ambition must be made”: Ibid.
57 “In republican government”: Ibid.
58 “small territory . . . in a large republic”: Montesquieu, p. 176.
58 “thousand views”: Ibid.
59 “In the extended Republic”: Federalist 51.
59 “Temporising applications will dishonor”: LMW II.
60 “different from each other”: LWL.
60 “On the need”: Berkin, p. 71.
60 “It was axiomatic”: Brant, p. 11.
61 “Mr. Randolph opened”: Farrand I, pp. 18â19.
61 “his regret . . . open the great subject”: Ibid., p. 18.
62 “It is altogether possible”: TFC, p. 89.
62 “contained no remedy”: Farrand I, p. 319.
65 “As the States”: Ibid., p. 196.
65 “If political Societies”: Ibid., p. 491.
65 “what advantage the greater States”: Ibid., p. 198.
66 “Mr. Sherman . . . admitted”: Ibid., p. 35.
66 “national Legislature”: Ibid., p. 192.
67 “information and are”: Ibid., p. 48.
67 “the number of Representatives”: Ibid., p. 197.
67 “that a question”: Ibid., p. 201.
67 “at the existence”: Ibid., pp. 177â79.
68 “It has given me”: Ibid., p. 197.
68 “the muster rolls”: Ibid., p. 497.
68 “lamented . . . instead of coming here”: Ibid., p. 467.
68 “fate of America”: TFC, p. 94.
69 “that a rupture”: Farrand I, p. 462.
69 “the same causes”: Ibid., p. 464.
69 “that some good plan”: Ibid., p. 463.
70 “We were partly national”: Ibid., p. 468.
70 “We are now”: Ibid., p. 511.
70 “to take into consideration”: Ibid., p. 517.
70 “that in the second Branch”: Ibid., p. 524.
71 “the vote of this morning”: Farrand II, pp. 17â18.
71 “no good government”: Ibid., p. 20.
71 “Others . . . seemed inclined”: Ibid., p. 20.
72 “double security . . . the rights”: Federalist 51.
72 “This subject . . . the most difficult”: Farrand II, p. 501.
72 “One great object”: Ibid., p. 52.
72 “omnipotent . . . If no effectual check”: Ibid., p. 35.
73 “with for and against”: Ibid., pp. 191â92.
73 “may have been circulating rumors”: TFC, p. 175.
73 “If he ought”: Farrand II, pp. 54â55.
73 “The sense of the Nation”: Ibid., p. 29.
73 “It would be as unnatural”: Ibid., p. 31.
74 “the work of intrigue”: Ibid., p. 29.
74 “he who has proved himself ”: Ibid., p. 55.
74 “will never fail”: Ibid., p. 29.
74 “In every Stage”: Ibid., pp. 118â19.
75 “the danger of intrigue”: Ibid., p. 500.