The Federalist Papers: Explained
Hamilton looks past the question of whether divided states would fight and asks the harder question. What would all that fighting do to the people who had to live through it? His answer is unsentimental and a little chilling. When a country lives in constant danger, even people who love freedom will gradually trade it for safety, building bigger armies, growing the executive, and getting used to soldiers calling the shots. Britain stayed free because its island geography meant it never had to do that, and Hamilton argues a united America gets the same gift while a disunited America loses it forever.
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