Antifederalist No. 3
NEW CONSTITUTION CREATES A NATIONAL GOVERNMENT; WILL NOT ABATE
FOREIGN INFLUENCE; DANGERS OF CIVIL WAR AND DESPOTISM
Like the nome de plume "Publius" used by pro Constitution writers
in the Federalist Papers, several Antifederalists signed their
writings "A FARMER." While the occupation of the writers may not
have coincided with the name given, the arguments against
consolidating power in the hands of a central government were
widely read. The following was published in the Maryland Gazette
and Baltimore Advertiser, March 7, 1788. The true identity of
the author is unknown.
There are but two modes by which men are connected in
society, the one which operates on individuals, this always has
been, and ought still to be called, national government; the
other which binds States and governments together (not
corporations, for there is no considerable nation on earth,
despotic, monarchical, or republican, that does not contain many
subordinate corporations with various constitutions) this last
has heretofore been denominated a league or confederacy. The term
federalists is therefore improperly applied to themselves, by the
friends and supporters of the proposed constitution. This abuse
of language does not help the cause; every degree of imposition
serves only to irritate, but can never convince. They are
national men, and their opponents, or at least a great majority
of them, are federal, in the only true and strict sense of the
word.
Whether any form of national government is preferable for
the Americans, to a league or confederacy, is a previous question
we must first make up our minds upon....
That a national government will add to the dignity and
increase the splendor of the United States abroad, can admit of
no doubt: it is essentially requisite for both. That it will
render government, and officers of government, more dignified at
home is equally certain. That these objects are more suited to
the manners, if not [the] genius and disposition of our people
is, I fear, also true. That it is requisite in order to keep us
at peace among ourselves, is doubtful. That it is necessary, to
prevent foreigners from dividing us, or interfering in our
government, I deny positively; and, after all, I have strong
doubts whether all its advantages are not more specious than
solid. We are vain, like other nations. We wish to make a noise
in the world; and feel hurt that Europeans are not so attentive
to America in peace, as they were to America in war. We are
also, no doubt, desirous of cutting a figure in history. Should
we not reflect, that quiet is happiness? That content and pomp
are incompatible? I have either read or heard this truth, which
the Americans should never forget: That the silence of historians
is the surest record of the happiness of a people. The Swiss
have been four hundred years the envy of mankind, and there is
yet scarcely an history of their nation. What is history, but a
disgusting and painful detail of the butcheries of conquerors,
and the woeful calamities of the conquered? Many of us are
proud, and are frequently disappointed that office confers
neither respect or difference. No man of merit can ever be
disgraced by office. A rogue in office may be feared in some
governments-he will be respected in none. After all, what we
call respect and difference only arise from contrast of
situation, as most of our ideas come by comparison and relation.
Where the people are free there can be no great contrast or
distinction among honest citizens in or out of office. In
proportion as the people lose their freedom, every gradation of
distinction, between the Governors and governed obtains, until
the former become masters, and the latter become slaves. In all
governments virtue will command reverence. The divine Cato knew
every Roman citizen by name, and never assumed any preeminence;
yet Cato found, and his memory will find, respect and reverence
in the bosoms of mankind, until this world returns into that
nothing, from whence Omnipotence called it. That the people are
not at present disposed for, and are actually incapable of,
governments of simplicity and equal rights, I can no longer
doubt. But whose fault is it? We make them bad, by bad
governments, and then abuse and despise them for being so. Our
people are capable of being made anything that human nature was
or is capable of, if we would only have a little patience and
give them good and wholesome institutions; but I see none such
and very little prospect of such. Alas! I see nothing in my
fellow-citizens, that will permit my still fostering the
delusion, that they are now capable of sustaining the weight of
SELF-GOVERNMENT: a burden to which Greek and Roman shoulders
proved unequal. The honor of supporting the dignity of the human
character, seems reserved to the hardy Helvetians alone. If the
body of the people will not govern themselves, and govern
themselves well too, the consequence is unavoidable-a FEW will,
and must govern them. Then it is that government becomes truly a
government by force only, where men relinquish part of their
natural rights to secure the rest, instead of an union of will
and force, to protect all their natural rights, which ought to be
the foundation of every rightful social compact.
Whether national government will be productive of internal
peace, is too uncertain to admit of decided opinion. I only
hazard a conjecture when I say, that our state disputes, in a
confederacy, would be disputes of levity and passion, which would
subside before injury. The people being free, government having
no right to them, but they to government, they would separate and
divide as interest or inclination prompted-as they do at this
day, and always have done, in Switzerland. In a national
government, unless cautiously and fortunately administered, the
disputes will be the deep-rooted differences of interest, where
part of the empire must be injured by the operation of general
law; and then should the sword of government be once drawn (which
Heaven avert) I fear it will not be sheathed, until we have waded
through that series of desolation, which France, Spain, and the
other great kingdoms of the world have suffered, in order to
bring so many separate States into uniformity, of government and
law; in which event the legislative power can only be entrusted
to one man (as it is with them) who can have no local
attachments, partial interests, or private views to gratify.
That a national government will prevent the influence or
danger of foreign intrigue, or secure us from invasion, is in my
judgment directly the reverse of the truth. The only foreign, or
at least evil foreign influence, must be obtained through
corruption. Where the government is lodged in the body of the
people, as in Switzerland, they can never be corrupted; for no
prince, or people, can have resources enough to corrupt the
majority of a nation; and if they could, the play is not worth
the candle. The facility of corruption is increased in
proportion as power tends by representation or delegation, to a
concentration in the hands of a few. . . .
As to any nation attacking a number of confederated
independent republics ... it is not to be expected, more
especially as the wealth of the empire is there universally
diffused, and will not be collected into any one overgrown,
luxurious and effeminate capital to become a lure to the
enterprizing ambitious. That extensive empire is a misfortune to
be deprecated, will not now be disputed. The balance of power has
long engaged the attention of all the European world, in order to
avoid the horrid evils of a general government. The same
government pervading a vast extent of territory, terrifies the
minds of individuals into meanness and submission. All human
authority, however organized, must have confined limits, or
insolence and oppression will prove the offspring of its
grandeur, and the difficulty or rather impossibility of escape
prevents resistance. Gibbon relates that some Roman Knights who
had offended government in Rome were taken up in Asia, in a very
few days after. It was the extensive territory of the Roman
republic that produced a Sylla, a Marius, a Caligula, a Nero, and
an Elagabalus. In small independent States contiguous to each
other, the people run away and leave despotism to reek its
vengeance on itself; and thus it is that moderation becomes with
them, the law of self-preservation. These and such reasons
founded on the eternal and immutable nature of things have long
caused and will continue to cause much difference of sentiment
throughout our wide extensive territories. From our divided and
dispersed situation, and from the natural moderation of the
American character, it has hitherto proved a warfare of argument
and reason.
A FARMER