Antifederalist No. 7 ADOPTION OF THE CONSTITUTION WILL LEAD TO CIVIL WAR
"PHILANTHROPOS," (an anonymous Virginia Antifederalist) appeared
in The Virginia Journal and Alexandria Advertiser, December 6, 1787, writing his
version of history under the proposed new Constitution.
The time in which the constitution or government of a nation undergoes any
particular change, is always interesting and critical. Enemies are vigilant,
allies are in suspense, friends hesitating between hope and fear; and all men
are in eager expectation to see what such a change may produce. But the state
of our affairs at present, is of such moment, as even to arouse the dead ...
[A certain defender of the Constitution has stated that objections to it]
are more calculated to alarm the fears of the people than to answer any valuable
end. Was that the case, as it is not, will any man in his sober senses say,
that the least infringement or appearance of infringement on our liberty -that
liberty which has lately cost so much blood and treasure, together with anxious
days and sleepless nights-ought not both to rouse our fears and awaken our
jealousy? ... The new constitution in its present form is calculated to produce
despotism, thraldom and confusion, and if the United States do swallow it, they
will find it a bolus, that will create convulsions to their utmost extremities.
Were they mine enemies, the worst imprecation I could devise would be, may they
adopt it. For tyranny, where it has been chained (as for a few years past) is
always more cursed, and sticks its teeth in deeper than before. Were Col.
[George] Mason's objections obviated, the improvement would be very
considerable, though even then, not so complete as might be. The Congress's
having power without control-to borrow money on the credit of the United States;
their having power to appoint their own salaries, and their being paid out of
the treasury of the United States, thereby, in some measure, rendering them
independent of the individual states; their being judges of the qualification
and election of their own members, by which means they can get men to suit any
purpose; together with Col. Mason's wise and judicious objections-are
grievances, the very idea of which is enough to make every honest citizen
exclaim in the language of Cato, 0 Liberty, 0 my country! Our present
constitution, with a few additional powers to Congress, seems better calculated
to preserve the rights and defend the liberties of our citizens, than the one
proposed, without proper amendments. Let us therefore, for once, show our
judgment and solidity by continuing it, and prove the opinion to be erroneous,
that levity and fickleness are not only the foibles of our tempers, but the
reigning principles in these states. There are men amongst us, of such
dissatisfied tempers, that place them in Heaven, they would find something to
blame; and so restless and self- sufficient, that they must be eternally
reforming the state. But the misfortune is, they always leave affairs worse
than they find them. A change of government is at all times dangerous, but at
present may be fatal, without the utmost caution, just after emerging out of a
tedious and expensive war. Feeble in our nature, and complicated in our form,
we are little able to bear the rough Posting of civil dissensions which are
likely to ensue. Even now, discontent and opposition distract our councils.
Division and despondency affect our people. Is it then a time to alter our
government, that government which even now totters on its foundation, and will,
without tender care, produce ruin by its fall?
Beware my countrymen! Our enemies- -uncontrolled as they are in their
ambitious schemes, fretted with losses, and perplexed with disappointments-will
exert their whole power and policy to increase and continue our confusion. And
while we are destroying one another, they will be repairing their losses, and
ruining our trade.
Of all the plagues that infest a nation, a civil war is the worst. Famine
is severe, pestilence is dreadful; but in these, though men die, they die in
peace. The father expires without the guilt of the son; and the son, if he
survives, enjoys the inheritance of his father. Cities may be thinned, but they
neither plundered nor burnt. But when a civil war is kindled, there is then
forth no security of property nor protection from any law. Life and fortune
become precarious. And all that is dear to men is at the discretion of
profligate soldiery, doubly licentious on such an occasion. Cities are
exhausted by heavy contributions, or sacked because they cannot answer
exorbitant demand. Countries are eaten up by the parties they favor, and
ravaged by the one they oppose. Fathers and sons, sheath their swords in
anothers bowels in the field, and their wives and daughters are exposed to
rudeness and lust of ruffians at home. And when the sword has decided quarrel,
the scene is closed with banishments, forfeitures, and barbarous executions that
entail distress on children then unborn. May Heaven avert the dreadful
catastrophe! In the most limited governments, what wranglings, animosities,
factions, partiality, and all other evils that tend to embroil a nation and
weaken a state, are constantly practised by legislators. What then may we
expect if the new constitution be adopted as it now stands? The great will
struggle for power, honor and wealth; the poor become a prey to avarice,
insolence and oppression. And while some are studying to supplant their
neighbors, and others striving to keep their stations, one villain will wink at
the oppression of another, the people be fleeced, and the public business
neglected. From despotism and tyranny good Lord deliver us.
|