1.Large landowners, such as manorial lords, were primarily among those who contributed to the Constitution’s drafting. Other groups, including plant owners, creditors, merchants, and plant owners, backed this initiative. Slaves, indentured servants, and small-scale white farmers were among the groups that were excluded because they were thought to pose the biggest threat.
2.I’d say that the social framework of the early American society is still present in today’s society. The two social strata of those who own riches and those who don’t still exist today. Wealthy people in early American culture, such as slaveowners, were mainly interested in ways to increase their own riches and defend their estates. Capitalists in today’s culture are primarily interested in their own interests, ways to increase their income, and measures to defend their properties. And the upper class has always taken advantage of the working people for their own personal gain.
3.Because of what I mentioned in my response to their first question—the rise of the lower class—they were terrified of democracy. Giving these men and women an equal voice was evidently something that America was difficult to accomplish given that they had witnessed daily large-scale migrations of immigrants and slaves to the new country.