The Anti-Federalists charged that the authors of the Constitution had failed to put up strong enough barriers to block this inevitably corrupting and tyrannical force. They painted a very black picture indeed of what the national representatives might and probably would do with the unchecked power conferred upon them under the provisions of the new Constitution...But [the Anti-Federalists] lacked both the faith and the vision to extend their principles nationwide."
Answer:
Resistance of western farmers to federal oversight
Explanation:
From the excerpt of Cecelia M. Kenyon, historian, “Men of Little Faith: The Anti-Federalists on the Nature of Representative Government,” 1955
It can be concluded that by the 1790s the ideas of the anti-federalists contributed most directly to the "Resistance of western farmers to federal oversight."
This was evident in what happened or events such as the Whiskey Rebellion in 1794, which showed the readiness of western farmers to resist federal taxation on the beliefs of the American Revolution, specifically the idea of going against taxation without local representation.
On the other hand, the federal government defended that the taxes were the lawful manifestation of Congressional taxation powers.
Some important causes here included the fact that italian city states duing the renaissance age were somewhat politically self-sufficient. All of them had powerful families that had rule over the cities. Furthermore, all of them, or the majority at least, had established trade with other cities as well as built navies that supplied them with goods from other lands. All of this enabled them a high level of autonomy and political power.
Answer:
b
Explanation:
It the only one that make sense
When ancient cities get lost in China, they get lost in places like Anyang. The ebbs and flows of 20th-century history rushed across this part of the Yellow River plain, leaving their traces like so much jumbled driftwood. Outside of Anyang stands the tomb of warlord Yuan Shikai, who briefly seized control of the nation in the 1910s. Anyang's new downtown—white tile, blue glass—is a monument to another conqueror, the modernization of post-reform China. Wedged between the tomb and the town, there's an old airstrip that was built by Japanese imperialists during their occupation in the 1930s.