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Constitution Of The United States: Argument Analysis

1566 Words7 Pages

Spencer Kersey
5/8/2016
7th Period
Which side has the biggest BUT?
First of all, to get this off my chest, I would like to allow the view of the argument to be known. The view that will be provided today is the obvious, but correct answer which is also known as the confederate view which says that seceding is 100% correct no matter what anyone says or thinks. As many know the topic of secession would have to be in the constitution for it to be wrong, but this isn’t the case. Before the constitution was made and put into commission there was the Articles of Confederation which was a very loose agreement that didn’t say anything about states from the Confederation seceding from it since it was more like a written and signed alliance between …show more content…

To start off with we know the side of John C. Calhoun was because of his quote at a dinner, which was to honor the memory of Thomas Jefferson, with Andrew Jackson. After Andrew Jackson made a toast saying, “The Union must and shall be preserved,”(Andrew Jackson) John C. Calhoun got up and toasted saying,” The Union next to our liberty most dear.”(John C. Calhoun) This shows that if John C. Calhoun was living during the times of the secession crisis that he would be on the right side of the Confederates. We know how the people that lavished in his memory, but what did Thomas Jefferson think of the issue himself. First of all I think you know what side he was on since he was smart and always thinking ahead for, not the United States of America, but the actual states and people inside the United States. We know that the one and only Thomas Jefferson was a Confederate because of his actions and this quote he made in a letter not meant for the public eye to read and he says,” States should separate from our companions only when the sole alternatives left, are the dissolution of our Union with them, or submission to a government without limitation of powers.” As you can see here, many of the writers of the constitution, writers of the Declaration of Independence, and the leaders of the United States of America believed in secession. They all say this, but as Jefferson says,” Only when the sole alternatives left.” This means that states should not secede from the union unless their hand is forced by a leading group within or outside of the union which in the case that caused the civil war was the

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