Each Generation of Americans must define what it means to be American

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Each Generation of Americans must define what it means to be American "Each generation of Americans must define what it means to be an American" (William Jefferson Clinton) On 4 July 1776 the American colonies issued a Declaration of Independence from Britain, written by Thomas Jefferson; in it were listed the grievances that colonists felt towards the British government in general, and King George III in particular. The American people no longer accepted the legitimacy of Britain and its king to govern them. Since the first white settlers immigrated to America in the fifteenth century, each generation has constantly attempted to redefine what it means to be an American, priding itself "not merely on being different from every other nation, but in being wholly exceptional", with its own distinct values, traditions, political system and culture, based on principles of liberty, democracy, capitalism and individuality. In examining the way in which generations of Americans have sought to define their "Americanness", I have decided to focus on three fundamental periods in American history: the post-Revolutionary period, the antebellum South and the role of slavery, and the McCarthy witchtrials of the 1950's. The first significant event which prompted the American people to evaluate what it means to be an American was the American Revolution. John Locke's theory of Social Contract can largely be employed to explain the general discontent of the American people under British rule. Locke's theory claimed that the authority of a government to rule came from a social contract which was made between all members of society when that society was primarily established. The individual members of that society agreed to allocate certain powers to the government, and to abide by its laws and regulations, if in return, the government used these powers in the interest of all of its citizens. If these powers were abused, then the social contract would no longer be valid, and the people would no longer be obliged to obey the government. This theory was particularly attractive to the American people, the majority of whom felt that they were being dictated to and exploited by a tyrannical government with absolute, unlimited power. They believed that the authority and legitimacy of governments had to come from the people, that the powers that were granted to the government had to be restricted, and that because the British government was exercising absolute control, that they retained the right to rebel and overthrow the government. During the early years following the Revolution, the American people were still suspicious of centralised power, and feared tyranny and corruption, limiting national power to a bare minimum. The localist Articles of Confederation were drafted in 1776 and finally ratified in 1781, the first American attempt to produce a national framework of government; each of the thirteen states was allowed to preserve its independence, and retain its own powers, under Article II, which states that, "Each state retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and every power, jurisdiction, and right, which is not by this confederation expressly delegated to the United States, in Congress assembled." The result of this unlimited freedom allocated to each individual state was that the institutions of the Confederation were relatively powerless. The Confederation lacked the means to raise funds, or to pay off the nation's revolutionary debt; it was unable to acquire access for American products in foreign markets, and failed to protect fundamental national interests that conflicted with those of England and Spain. Each state was allowed to regulate its own laws on trade and taxation; the Confederation Congress had no power to enforce these laws, resulting in a system of government that was too weak and ineffective, unable to command respect internally and overseas. Many Americans such as James Madison now believed that a new national government system had to be established, in which specific powers and authority would be defined, to ensure that it would remain effective. Madison believed that a strong central government was
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potentially dangerous, but that an ineffective central authority was more detrimental to the future of the states. In Vices of the Political System of the United States, he wrote that the failure of the states to adhere to the Constitutional requirements "has been so fully experienced both during the war and since the peace, results so naturally from the number and independent authority of the States, and has been so uniformly exemplified in every similar Confederacy, that it may be considered as not less radically and permanently inherent in, than is fatal to the object of, the present system." He ...

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