
How the U.S. Constitution Almost Didn’t Happen
The creation of the U.S. Constitution wasn’t some noble, unified moment where everyone held hands and sang about freedom. It was a brutal summer of backroom deals, shouting matches, and a propaganda war that would make modern political campaigns look tame. In 1787, the young United States was falling apart. The country’s first attempt at a constitution—the Articles of Confederation—was a disaster. The Founders had been so terrified of creating another king that they’d made the central government basically powerless. It couldn’t collect taxes. It couldn’t regulate trade between states. It couldn’t enforce any laws. When farmers in Massachusetts grabbed their pitchforks and started an armed rebellion (Shays’ Rebellion), the government couldn’t even stop them. Leaders across the country realized: this isn’t working. The Philadelphia Convention: A Secret Meeting in a Sweltering Room (May–September 1787) Fifty-five delegates showed up in Philadelphia with a simple job: fix the Articles of Confederation. Make a few tweaks, patch the holes, send everyone home. Instead, they locked the windows. Yes, in the middle of a Philadelphia summer—imagine the heat, the sweat, the smell—they sealed the room for total secrecy. And then they decided to throw out the entire system and start over from scratch.
How the U.S. Constitution Almost Didn’t Happen
Trump Rises Above Politics and Gives a Stirring, Memorable Speech on July 4th
250th Anniversary Time Travel: What Would the Founders Think About the USA Today?
In Alexander Haig Fashion, Trump Tells Reporters He’s in Charge of Bibi Netanyahu
View Trump Carved into Mt. Rushmore, Per His Wish

