The Federalist Papers: Explained
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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