The Federalist Papers: Explained

Federalist No. 13 Explained: Why One Country Is Cheaper Than Several

32 min · 11 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Federalist No. 13 Explained: Why One Country Is Cheaper Than Several

Descripción

Running a country costs money — and Federalist No. 13 is Alexander Hamilton's short, sharp answer to the most relatable objection anyone made against the Constitution: that a whole new federal government would simply cost too much. Hamilton flips the math. The real choice was never between one government and none — it was between paying for one national government or paying for two or three, because a broken-up America would have to build the same expensive machinery over and over again. And along the way, the shortest paper in the entire series makes its eeriest prediction: that if America ever did split, it would split in two — north against south — with the state caught on the border becoming "the Flanders of America," the ground where the armies meet.

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15 episodios

Portada del episodio Federalist No. 13 Explained: Why One Country Is Cheaper Than Several

Federalist No. 13 Explained: Why One Country Is Cheaper Than Several

Running a country costs money — and Federalist No. 13 is Alexander Hamilton's short, sharp answer to the most relatable objection anyone made against the Constitution: that a whole new federal government would simply cost too much. Hamilton flips the math. The real choice was never between one government and none — it was between paying for one national government or paying for two or three, because a broken-up America would have to build the same expensive machinery over and over again. And along the way, the shortest paper in the entire series makes its eeriest prediction: that if America ever did split, it would split in two — north against south — with the state caught on the border becoming "the Flanders of America," the ground where the armies meet.

11 de jun de 202632 min
Portada del episodio Federalist No. 12 Explained: Where the Money Comes From

Federalist No. 12 Explained: Where the Money Comes From

Every government runs on money — and Federalist No. 12 is Alexander Hamilton's blunt, brilliant answer to where that money actually comes from. He argues that a government can only tax wealth that moves, that cash-poor America could never be funded by direct taxes on land, and that the one workable tax is a quiet duty on imported trade, collected at the ports. But there is a catch that turns out to be the whole point of the paper: those duties can only be collected if America stays one country, because a divided continent of open land borders would either lose the revenue to smuggling or need a French-style army of tax patrols to stop it. This is the episode where Hamilton the financier steps forward — two years before he became the first Secretary of the Treasury — and explains why revenue, in the end, is just another word for sovereignty.

4 de jun de 202628 min
Portada del episodio Federalist No. 11 Explained: Why Union Turns Trade Into Power

Federalist No. 11 Explained: Why Union Turns Trade Into Power

For ten papers, Publius warned New Yorkers about everything disunion would cost them. Federalist No. 11 is the turning point — the first paper that stops selling fear and starts selling opportunity. Hamilton argues that a united America is a single market three million people strong, big enough to make the powers of Europe bid against each other for the right to trade with it — and that commerce, handled as one nation, becomes a merchant fleet, then a navy, then the power to be taken seriously in the world. From the sugar islands of the Caribbean to a strange European theory that Americans were a degenerate people, this is the paper where Hamilton stops describing a shelter and starts describing a launchpad.

28 de may de 202632 min