How Was the Constitution a Bundle of Compromises

The United States Constitution of 1787 was a “Bundle of Compromises” due to its’ well organized collection of compromises which included Three fifths Compromise, The Great Compromise, and the Slave Trade Compromise for the primary reason of ratifying the Constitution by making it more palatable to the States opposed to it. The United States Constitution was built on compromises for the primary reason of ratifying the constitution. In order for the Constitution to be passed it had to be approved by all 13 states some of which were mostly anti-federalists and showed great disapproval to it. The United States Constitution was a Bundle of Compromises to the extent that it settled various arguments against it. They did this by giving up something in order to get something.
The United States Constitution was a “Bundle of Compromises” because of the various compromises that was included in it. One of which was the Three fifths compromise. This was a compromise because it settled the dispute on whether or not slaves should be represented and how they should be taxed. The constitution settled this agreement through the Three fifths compromise which made every 5 slaves count as 3 people. This was classified as a compromise because the Southern states, who primarily owned slaves, were given more representatives because of their population but also were at a loss because they still had to pay three-fifths taxes on all the slaves. The north was satisfied because the south had to pay taxes and slaves were not counted as a full person. The Slave-Trade Compromise was however settling the argument on whether or not slavery should be permitted in the states. The Slave-Trade compromise settled this by issuing that no new slaves were to be brought over to the states. This gave people who were opposing slavery to be somewhat satisfied while not abolishing slavery completely who were pro-slavery. Another compromise included in this “Bundle of Compromises” was the Great compromise....