Before the Constitution was drafted and ratified by the thirteen states, most Americans sincerely wished for a democratic republic national government that would hold the thirteen states as a whole country. With the deep distrust in a strong federal government, which is highly likely to be a tyranny, and the huge frustration from the weak national government created by the Articles of Confederation, the Founders desperately needed a strong basis for another national government with which Americans would perish over a long period of time. So, on behalf of Americans, the Founders at the Constitutional Convention came to write the U.S. Constitution with both virtuous philosophical principles and competing political interests to meet the urgent needs of the growing new country. Because the Founders took into accountability, however, the possibility that the new structural rules set forth in the U.S. Constitution would someday be considered as inadequate ones, they reached on an agreement to leave the Constitution flexible for the possible future changes in terms of new perspective on an existing principle. As the Founders predicted, amendments have been added to the Constitution to make it more democratic. Some of these amendments were the product of effort made by politicians, such as elected government officials, and some others were by civil organization. The Bill of the Rights marks the first ten amendments added to the Constitution by Antifederalists. In an attempt to prevent having a too powerful government, Antifederalists created such strong legal protection for the rights of the individual. In addition to the Bill of Rights, additional amendments were included in the Constitution, expanding the civil rights and liberties to every ethnic group in