Answer:
The Constitution of the United States was written in 1787 by 55 delegates at a Constitutional Convention. Its purpose was to revise the weaker Articles of Confederation that had held the 13 states together after they gained independence from Britain.
Before it could be put into place, it had to be ratified by conventions from each of the 13 states, where the delegates argued both for and against the binding document. One of the main arguments against the ratification of the US Constitution was the lack of specified individual rights and liberties, so James Madison drafted a set of amendments to add to the US Constitution if it was ratified.
By June 1789, Madison submitted 12 amendments, though only 10 were passed and ratified in 1791 as the Bill of Rights.
Since then, 17 more amendments have been passed and ratified by the process laid out in Article 5 of the US Constitution, where an amendment is proposed by either a two-thirds vote in Congress or a national convention of two-thirds of the states.
Explanation:
~Inosuke Hashibria~
King James granted colonial governors more power than the assemblies and this best describes King James II's approach to governance in the American colonies. The correct option among all the options that are given in the question is the third option. I hope the answer comes to your help.
<span>crops were overproduced i think</span>
I'm not sure which protesters you are referring to.
I would assume you are talking about Shay's Rebellion, which shows that the Articles of Confederation was not strong enough to fight off "attacks" on the hone front, leading to the Constitution.