>From John Quincy Adams, "Orations"
(http://www.selfknowledge.net/b/objqa10.htm)

                In the Declaration of Independence, the enacting and
                constituent party dispensing and delegating
sovereign power is
                the whole people of the United Colonies. The
recipient party,
                invested with power, is the United Colonies,
declared United
                States.

                In the Articles of Confederation, this order of
agency is
                inverted. Each State is the constituent and enacting
party, and
                the United States in Congress assembled the
recipient of
                delegated power--and that power delegated with such
a
                penurious and carking hand that it had more the
aspect of a
                revocation of the Declaration of Independence than
an
                instrument to carry it into effect.

                None of these indispensably necessary powers were
ever
                conferred by the State Legislatures upon the
Congress of the
                federation; and well was it that they never were.
The system
                itself was radically defective. Its incurable
disease was an
                apostasy from the principles of the Declaration of
                Independence. A substitution of separate State
sovereignties,
                in the place of the constituent sovereignty of the
people, was
                the basis of the Confederate Union.

                In the Congress of the Confederation, the master
minds of
                James Madison and Alexander Hamilton were constantly
                engaged through the closing years of the
Revolutionary War
                and those of peace which immediately succeeded. That
of John
                Jay was associated with them shortly after the
peace, in the
                capacity of Secretary to the Congress for Foreign
Affairs. The
                incompetency of the Articles of Confederation for
the
                management of the affairs of the Union at home and
abroad
                was demonstrated to them by the painful and
mortifying
                experience of every day. Washington, though in
retirement,
                was brooding over the cruel injustice suffered by
his associates
                in arms, the warriors of the Revolution; over the
prostration of
                the public credit and the faith of the nation, in
the neglect to
                provide for the payments even of the interest upon
the public
                debt; over the disappointed hopes of the friends of
freedom; in
                the language of the address from Congress to the
States of the
                eighteenth of April, 1788--"the pride and boast of
America, that
                the rights for which she contended were the rights
of human
                nature."

                At his residence at Mount Vernon, in March, 1785,
the first
                idea was started of a revisal of the Articles of
Confederation, by
                the organization of means differing from that of a
compact
                between the State Legislatures and their own
delegates in
                Congress. A convention of delegates from the State
                Legislatures, independent of the Congress itself,
was the
                expedient which presented itself for effecting the
purpose, and
                an augmentation of the powers of Congress for the
regulation
                of commerce, as the object for which this assembly
was to be
                convened. In January, 1785, the proposal was made
and
                adopted in the Legislature of Virginia, and
communicated to
                the other State Legislatures.

                The Convention was held at Annapolis, in September
of that
                year. It was attended by delegates from only five of
the central
                States, who, on comparing their restricted powers
with the
                glaring and universally acknowledged defects of the
                Confederation, reported only a recommendation for
the
                assemblage of another convention of delegates to
meet at
                Philadelphia, in May, 1787, from all the States, and
with
                enlarged powers.

                The Constitution of the United States was the work
of this
                Convention. But in its construction the Convention
                immediately perceived that they must retrace their
steps, and
                fall back from a league of friendship between
sovereign States
                to the constituent sovereignty of the people; from
power to
                right--from the irresponsible despotism of State
sovereignty to
                the self-evident truths of the Declaration of
Independence. In
                that instrument, the right to institute and to alter
governments
                among men was ascribed exclusively to the
people--the ends of
                government were declared to be to secure the natural
rights of
                man; and that when the government degenerates from
the
                promotion to the destruction of that end, the right
and the duty
                accrues to the people to dissolve this degenerate
government
                and to institute another. The signers of the
Declaration further
                averred, that the one people of the United Colonies
were then
                precisely in that situation--with a government
degenerated into
                tyranny, and called upon by the laws of nature and
of nature's
                God to dissolve that government and to institute
another. Then,
                in the name and by the authority of the good people
of the
                colonies, they pronounced the dissolution of their
allegiance to
                the king, and their eternal separation from the
nation of Great
                Britain--and declared the United Colonies
independent States.
                And here as the representatives of the one people
they had
                stopped. They did not require the confirmation of
this act, for
                the power to make the declaration had already been
conferred
                upon them by the people, delegating the power,
indeed,
                separately in the separate colonies, not by colonial
authority,
                but by the spontaneous revolutionary movement of the
people
                in them all.

                From the day of that Declaration, the constituent
power of the
                people had never been called into action. A
confederacy had
                been substituted in the place of a government, and
State
                sovereignty had usurped the constituent sovereignty
of the
                people.

                The Convention assembled at Philadelphia had
themselves
                no direct authority from the people. Their authority
was all
                derived from the State Legislatures. But they had
the Articles
                of Confederation before them, and they saw and felt
the
                wretched condition into which they had brought the
whole
                people, and that the Union itself was in the agonies
of death.
                They soon perceived that the indispensably needed
powers
                were such as no State government, no combination of
them,
                was by the principles of the Declaration of
Independence
                competent to bestow. They could emanate only from
the
                people. A highly respectable portion of the
assembly, still
                clinging to the confederacy of States, proposed, as
a substitute
                for the Constitution, a mere revival of the Articles
of
                Confederation, with a grant of additional powers to
the
                Congress. Their plan was respectfully and thoroughly
                discussed, but the want of a government and of the
sanction of
                the people to the delegation of powers happily
prevailed. A
                constitution for the people, and the distribution of
legislative,
                executive, and judicial powers was prepared. It
announced
                itself as the work of the people themselves; and as
this was
                unquestionably a power assumed by the Convention,
not
                delegated to them by the people, they religiously
confined it to
                a simple power to propose, and carefully provided
that it should
                be no more than a proposal until sanctioned by the
                Confederation Congress, by the State Legislatures,
and by the
                people of the several States, in conventions
specially
                assembled, by authority of their Legislatures, for
the single
                purpose of examining and passing upon it.

                And thus was consummated the work commenced by the
                Declaration of Independence--a work in which the
people of the
                North American Union, acting under the deepest sense
of
                responsibility to the Supreme Ruler of the universe,
had
                achieved the most transcendent act of power that
social man in
                his mortal condition can perform--even that of
dissolving the
                ties of allegiance by which he is bound to his
country; of
                renouncing that country itself; of demolishing its
government;
                of instituting another government; and of making for
himself
                another country in its stead.

                                  ............John Quincy Adams,
April 30, 1839



Michael Sondow
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