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Instructions for Side by Side Printing
  1. Print the notecards
  2. Fold each page in half along the solid vertical line
  3. Cut out the notecards by cutting along each horizontal dotted line
  4. Optional: Glue, tape or staple the ends of each notecard together
  1. Verify Front of pages is selected for Viewing and print the front of the notecards
  2. Select Back of pages for Viewing and print the back of the notecards
    NOTE: Since the back of the pages are printed in reverse order (last page is printed first), keep the pages in the same order as they were after Step 1. Also, be sure to feed the pages in the same direction as you did in Step 1.
  3. Cut out the notecards by cutting along each horizontal and vertical dotted line
To print: Ctrl+PPrint as a list

16 notecards = 4 pages (4 cards per page)

Viewing:

AP Foundational Documents

front 1

Declaration of Independence

back 1

Justified why the colonies broke away from Britain

Natural Rights, Consent of Governed, Limited Governments, Social Contract, Popular Sovereignty.

Influenced by John Locke

front 2

Articles of Confederation

back 2

Too weak of central government, no federal army, hard for legislation, states had too much power, Congress couldn't tax, Unicameral gov.

9/13 states needed to pass laws

front 3

US Constitution

back 3

Three branches of gov with checks and balances.

Bicameral, relationships between states, Amendment process

Stronger national gov.

front 4

Federalist no. 10

back 4

Factions are inevitable, but having a strong and large central government allows to mitigate this problem. Large republic allows to address faction by dissolving power. Prevents tyranny of majority. Pluralism; many factions competing leads to better ideas.

front 5

Brutus 1

back 5

Having a large republic doesn't allow for government to connect with people and central gov has too much power. Necessary and proper clause is a blank check, while state gov will be obsolete, Congress cannot meet local concerns.

front 6

Federalist no. 51

back 6

Power is divided between three branches of government w/ little control over the other. national/ state gov; House and Senate are divided and elected. Checks and balances, keeps power from being too centralized.

front 7

Federalist no. 70

back 7

A single executive is needed. Allows for one person to hold the blame.

President needs to be able to act swiftly to address concerns. Rejects a plural executive, and instead argues for a Cabinet.

front 8

Federalist no. 78

back 8

The least dangerous branch; judicial branch. Argued for lifetime judicial appointments, to prevent corruption. The power of judicial review.

front 9

Letter from a Birmingham Jail

back 9

Justice delayed is justice denied. Freedom isn't voluntarily given, but must be demanded by the oppressed. All people should be treated the same under the 14th Amendment (Equal Protection Clause). Nonviolent direct action seeks to create urgency legislative action.

front 10

Article 1

back 10

Legislative - bicameral, house and senate details, how a bill becomes a law, enumerated powers and commerce clause; elastic. Denied powers.

front 11

Article 2

back 11

Presidency, terms, qualifications

front 12

Article 3

back 12

Judicial system and Supreme Court

front 13

Article 4

back 13

The sanctity of individual states, full faith and credit clause, rights between states, citizen rights.

front 14

Article 5

back 14

How the Constitution is amended (proposed by 2/3 both houses or states; ratified by 3/4 states)

front 15

Article 6

back 15

Supremacy clause

front 16

Article 7

back 16

Original requirements for ratification (9 states)