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AP U.S. History Exam 2.13. How does the excerpt reflect the Articles of Confederation's approach towards the democratic goals of the American Revolution?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

[ musical flourish ]

00:03

And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by a democratic goal,

00:07

the game-winning play in a Congressional match.

00:10

Yeah. Go, Congress.

00:11

All right. Check out this excerpt.

00:13

[ mumbles ]

00:17

[ mumbling continues ]

00:20

All right, and the question:

00:22

How does the excerpt reflect the Articles of Confederation's

00:25

approach toward the democratic goals of the American Revolution?

00:30

All right, and here are your potential answers.

00:31

[ mumbles ]

00:35

Okay, here we go. Well, after successfully fighting off

00:37

a powerful king, the founding fathers went to pretty great lengths

00:40

to make sure future generations wouldn't be royally screwed.

00:44

So did the Articles of Confederation reflect

00:47

the democratic goals of the American Revolution because

00:50

A - it prevented the formation of a legislative branch?

00:54

Well, actually, the central form of government under the Articles

00:57

was a legislative branch. It was also the only branch.

01:00

And a pretty ineffective one, at that.

01:02

All right, according to the excerpt, did the Articles of Confederation

01:04

approach the democratic goals of the Revolution by

01:06

B - allowing free trade and commerce between states?

01:10

Well, although the Articles allowed free trade and created a

01:12

pretty strong bond between states,

01:14

those two goals weren't necessarily at the top of the Revolution's wishlist.

01:17

So no on B and no on C.

01:20

Which means the Articles most reflected

01:22

the democratic goals of the American Revolution by D -

01:24

giving power to the states rather than to the central government.

01:28

Having already dealt with some severe royal pain,

01:30

the founding fathers gave more power to individual states

01:32

rather than a strong central government.

01:34

So D is the right answer.

01:36

The founding fathers may have gone a little overboard

01:38

with the weak executive, but after living through such a

01:41

protracted battle royale,

01:42

they saw the king of the castle as more of a... hassle.

01:46

[ oh ]

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