Federalist No. 9: Can a Republic Be Designed to Survive Itself?

In Federalist No. 9, Alexander Hamilton argues that liberty is not preserved by weakening government, but by designing it to withstand human conflict. As polarization deepens and trust in institutions erodes, this essay challenges a familiar instinct: that freedom thrives in the absence of structure. Instead, it asks whether a durable republic—one capable of resisting faction, instability, and collapse—is the very thing that protects both justice and the vulnerable.

Federalist No. 7: Borders, Power, and the Logic of Force

In Federalist No. 7, Alexander Hamilton argues that unresolved disputes between states would inevitably lead to violence—making a strong federal authority essential to peace. But the logic that consolidates power to prevent conflict also reshapes how force is justified, centralized, and normalized. This essay examines where prevention ends and permission begins, and why that line still matters today.