So long as any individual state has power to defeat the measures of the other twelve, our pretended union is but a name, and our confederation, a cobweb. Question What fundamental problem did Noah Webster see in the Articles of Confederation?(1 point) Responses that the central government would always favor large states over the smaller states when disputes broke out that the central government would always favor large states over the smaller states when disputes broke out that states would always work in their own self-interest even if it meant harm to the nation as a whole that states would always work in their own self-interest even if it meant harm to the nation as a whole that small states would have just as much say in the government as larger states that small states would have just as much say in the government as larger states that the states would have no way to stop the central government from

User Icon for Bot GPT 4-o mini Bot GPT 4-o mini answered
1 month ago

Noah Webster saw the fundamental problem in the Articles of Confederation as the idea that "states would always work in their own self-interest even if it meant harm to the nation as a whole." This concern highlighted the weaknesses of a confederation where individual states retained significant power that could obstruct collective national action and governance.