Over the past few months, the current of change that now courses through the colonies has produced startling results; As the colonies continue to shift away from their mother country and rebellion sweeps the developing nation, unification weighs heavily on the minds of the people. The past few years have represented a landmark change in the political nature of the colonies. With the recent release of the Articles of Confederation, however, tensions over the path this newborn government should follow have swelled to a deafening crescendo. However, although it may not be a perfect solution, the Articles of Confederation provides the substantive base upon which our fledgling government can improve.
This does not represent the first attempt at uniting the colonies under a universal governing…
While the document establishes a central government in charge of managing national institutions such as foreign affairs and the military, its powers do not extend to taxation. The common argument claims that such a responsibility of a nation’s financial state should fall to the centralized governing force intended tasked with so many other crucial duties of national organization should have the ability to fund itself. But indeed, how is one to argue for a government’s universal right to tax its people when we have only just departed from Britain in part due to a nearly identical situation? Surely if one of the world’s most successful and expansive empires could not find a way to institute a secure system to levy federal taxes, it would be foolish to expect such a feat from a mere fledgeling of a nation. Taxation belongs under the dominion individual state governments which have done so for many years without protest or conflict. A central tax system could trigger further division and revolution, leading to more bloodshed and economic loss than has already been…