Respuesta :
Answer:
Hamilton feared the unity of the country was at stake during the process to write the new Constitution.
Explanation:
Answer:
A. Hamilton feared the unity of the country was at stake during the process to write the new Constitution.
Explanation:
In his "Federalist Papers No. 1", Alexander Hamilton mentioned how he felt the need to introduce and write "the Constitution for the United States of America" is of extreme importance. But this importance is not just about the new law that will judge the citizens but if, by any case, wrongfully written and presented, can ruin the lives of the whole nation and bring its downfall.
He questions whether "societies of men are really capable or not of establishing good government" or are they "forever destined to depend for their political constitutions on accident and force". Fearing for the collapse of the united stand of the country, Hamilton claims that any faulty move in writing this new Constitution may come to be "considered as the general misfortune of mankind".