The Federalist Papers: Explained

Federalist No. 7 Explained: What States Would Fight Over

25 min · 30. huhti 2026
jakson Federalist No. 7 Explained: What States Would Fight Over kansikuva

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Hamilton gets specific: territory, trade, debt, broken contracts, and foreign alliances. Each is already visible inside the current confederation. Each would escalate to war without the Constitution.

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

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. kesä 202632 min
jakson Federalist No. 12 Explained: Where the Money Comes From kansikuva

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. kesä 202628 min
jakson Federalist No. 11 Explained: Why Union Turns Trade Into Power kansikuva

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.

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