When aA civilization can feel as if they aren't being represented, or something that many people see as wrong, this should be fixed. This will prompt them to want to change something, out of the hopes that they, themselves, will benefit from the change. Like when governments don't give enough representation to the individual in their society, which many people will get angry at. They will then protest, and want that to be changed. This can also happen when a large margin of a society sees something as ethically or morally wrong, and can apply the same means of protest and angst that would change how the government would act. Uncalled for actions from any powerful group, representative, or society itself, that a large margin of people disagree with, can prompt uproar, and …show more content…
Many of these incidents happened during the American Rrevolution, as the Ccolonistsials were trying to evade British control, and applied the same tactics to deal with them. Many of these instances were caused by the British overtaxing the colonistsColonists, and of course, the colonistsColonists retaliating by the methods mentioned above. For example, the Quartering Act, required Colonial households to care for 1 British soldier, and pay for the expenses. It also taxed goods such as paint, glass, and tea. The colonistsColonists hated this and retaliated by boycotting these goods, protesting in the streets, and sending many letters to Britain to repeal the act. ColonistsColonists decided they needed to band together, and created secret societies as an outcome of this act. Eventually, they repealed this one act but there were still many taxes and acts in place. Such as the dreaded Tea Tax, which was one of the most outrageous taxes ever placed on the colonistsColonists. Britain decided to keep this one tax, to prove that they still had power over them, after many others
All the documents had to be formally printed in England and were distinguished by a special stamp. Then these pieces of paper had to be bought from a special agent at a price. This meant that the colonists had to pay taxes on every thing they bought from the British government. It was expected that this tax would raise 60,000 pounds annually. The colonists despised this and tried to buy as little as they could from England. After this act the colonists realised that the British government was revenue-raising. The colonists felt that the British Government should be helping to protect ones property not to take it. The colonists argued that they had no say or representation in the government and that is when the outcry started, “No taxation without representation!”
As stated in Document 2, the colonists believed that the only purpose for taxes was to regulate trade, when given consent. However, the British Parliament passed acts that only benefitted England. One of the most memorable acts was known as the Stamp Act. Established in 1765, the Stamp Act required a tax on all printed materials. This tax was seen as completely unconstitutional by the colonists as it was neither passed with their consent nor was its purpose to be for trade regulation. Rather, the sole purpose of this act was to raise revenue. According to Document 16, there were several other taxes passed without consent. In 1767, the Revenue Act was passed, This law required that taxes be paid on all British imports, such as paper, paint, lead, glass, and tea. Once again, the colonists were faced with taxes they had not consented to and that offered no benefit to
Colonists became furious with the Stamp Act and many people boycotted. They refused to pay taxes, ignored the stamps, and they even formed a secret society called the Sons of Liberty. Eventually, Parliament repealed the act but created the Declaratory Act. This showed that the Parliament had the right to make any laws. In 1767, they passed the Townshend Act which placed taxes on glass, lead, paints, paper, and tea. This angered the colonists once again because it took power away from colonial
Another tax was The Tea Act; this act was designed to help The East India Company by allowing it to bypass colonial merchants and sell straight to the stores. Tired of being taxed without having a representative in parliament, the colonists banded together in a group named The Sons of Liberty decided to unload all the tea into Boston harbor due to the refusal to send it back to Britain. This enraged King George so much he decided to pass an act purely for the punishment of the colonies until they paid for the lost tea (Timeline Of British Acts on America). These acts were named by parliament “The Coercive Acts” and renamed by the colonists “The Intolerable Acts”. They stated that the boston harbor be closed and only food and firewood be permitted to be imported (The Intolerable Acts), one must allow any
The Stamp Act of 1765 imposed a tax on all printed documents. Newspapers and almanacs were very popular at this time, as it was one of the only sources of entertainment and information for the colonists. A tax on documents as popular as those was able to affect the wide majority of the population and thus, take away large amounts of money from the colonies. Another Act which widely affected the colonies was the Tea Act of 1773. The British exempted the East India Company from export taxes into the colonies in an effort to stomp out colonial merchants from competition and monopolize the tea trade. This act was not popular with the merchants that lived off the high-in-demand tea trade and, along with other patriotic colonists, started protesting about the issue of taxation without representation. These acts and other tax-imposing ones led many to believe that having so many financial burdens should only be a decision that the colonial governments themselves should be making. This issue became a major difference in how Britain and the colonies believed a government should be
The colonists did not mind the taxes as much because some of the items that were taxed were unnecessary, however they did mind that the British were using their power as an excuse to tax the people for no reason (controlling them). The people’s money was not used in a useful matter, it was used for nothing, just extra money for the British to have. “The raising of revenue… was never intended… Never did the British parliament, (until the passing of the Stamp act) think of imposing duties in America for the purpose of raising a revenue. The Townshend Acts claim the authority to impose duties on these colonies, not for the regulation of trade… but for the single purpose of levying money upson us.” (Document 2). The British just decided one day to just tax the colonies for no reason and the people had no say in it. Also, the British soldiers would come to Boston and take the Boston colonists jobs. Men and women would lose their jobs because the British would take it away from them, they were stealing people’s jobs. The British were taking their money and now their jobs after all the colonists did for them in the French and Indian war. That is not fair for them to run the people like that and it had to be
The taxes imposed on the colonists by Britain were preposterous. One of the first taxes to be imposed on the colonists were the taxes stated in the Stamp Act. According to Document 10, no man should be subject to any tax to which he has given his own consent. The Stamp Act caused the colonists to revolt since they
The taxation of the colonists was very important to what would eventually be the American Revolution. The people of the colonies were finally united, though they have not called for an army to be made or haven’t talked about independence, they are starting to come together, and make their differences blur.
There was a lot of tension between the colonies and England as things were coming to an end. The British chose to put taxes on the colonies so they could get things back that was lost. Great Britain wants to have full power and all control to make laws and statutes. No one seemed to even care about the colonists at all. They decided to pass an act called the Stamp Act, so they could tax the people without representation.
Huge debts were owed to Great Britain for supplying the colonists with military support and supplies. To pay the dues, there was the establishment of the Stamp Act, the taxation on domestic goods and services. A tax on domestic merchandise brought even more anger to the colonists. The Sugar Act, the Townshed Duties and the Tea Act were also all introduced with the same fundamentals: applying tax on goods whether it be directly or indirectly, domestic or international. “British commercial regulations imposed a paltry economic burden on Americans, who enjoyed a rapid economic growth and a standard of living higher than their European counterparts” (McGaughy). Each act resulted in irritated colonists. Some even retaliated by tarring and feathering certain English tax enforcers living in the colonies.
By 1765 when Parliament passed the Stamp Acts, the colonies were already governing themselves so a certain extent and smuggling goods to avoid the British taxes. The colonists were being taxed extensively so that Britain could pay back their debts from the Seven-Years War, which was not fair for the colonists to be paying for, seeing as the colonies had absolutely no involvement in the Seven-Years war.
There were several acts that were passed without the consideration of the colonists that would force them to pay a ridiculous amount of taxes to the British mainland. One of these acts was named the Stamp Act, which was enacted in 1765, forced the colonists to pay a tax on every piece of printed paper that they used. This would include legal documents, license, commercial contracts and newspapers in the tax. This tax mostly effected the wealthier and influential of the colonists and would force them to unite in opposition. There were several other acts that would be passed that would force the colonists to pay undue taxes to the British, such as the Quartering Act and the Tea
There was another by-product of the war for Britain; her national debt more than doubled during the course of the conflict. At a time when Britain was starting to bend beneath the weight of the debt, it was only a matter of time before parliament looked to the colonies to help shoulder some of the price incurred in their defense. The Sugar and Stamp Acts were the first of many measures to tax the colonists. The Townshend Duties and the Tea Act would follow. While these measures outraged the colonists because of their monetary implications, it was the constitutional implications brought on by the Acts that were most offensive to the colonists. Until after the Seven Years War, the colonists had been left to essentially tax themselves. Now the colonists had a rallying cry, as they deplored the idea of no taxation without representation. In 1765 the Stamp Act Congress was held, and in a bid of utter defiance the representatives agreed that the colonial legislative assemblies alone had the right to tax the colonies. Parliament repealed the Stamp Act, but only after agreeing to pass the Declaratory Act, which informed the colonies that Britain did in fact have the right to legislate for the
Because of Britain?s unfair taxes and laws the colonists reacted in several different ways. Some reactions were economic, some were written, some were political and some were even violent. One reaction was to the taxes put on tea. The colonists had the Boston Tea Party in which colonists dressed as Indians and dumped hundreds of crates of tea into the Boston Harbor. (Doc#6) One form of violent protest was tarring and feathering. (Doc#2) It happened to a British customs inspector named John Malcom. He was stripped naked tarred and feathered, and dragged around town by horse drawn cart. (Doc#3) Another form of violent protest was when a stuffed dummy was hung in Boston representing a British tax collector named Andrew Oliver. Later that same night, his house was torn down in minutes by protesters. (Doc#4) A form of boycott was organized by the Sons and Daughters of Liberty. They made a poster saying not to buy anything from William Jackson, that if they did they would bring disgrace to
These acts had been around for a long time and caused little problems. They often benefited from these acts because although they had to buy from England, it was the most advanced industrial country and could often offer the best prices. The first tax to cause trouble in the colonies was the Sugar Act followed closely by the Stamp Act. The Sugar Act was truly just a restatement of old customs laws in an effort to raise money. The Stamp Act was a tax in which anything formally written or printed would have to be on specially stamped paper which was shipped from London. The colonists would soon pay taxes "at every stage of a lawsuit, that diplomas and deeds, almanacs and advertisements, bills and bonds, customs papers and newspapers, even dice and cards, would all be charged," (Morgan 19). The colonists reacted very violently to these taxes. They protested and boycotted throughout the nation and the British Parliament soon repealed the tax. Radicals began to proclaim the fact that there should be no taxation without representation. This meant that colonists should be represented in Parliament if they were going to be taxed by them. The British stated that every member of the Parliament was there to represent the whole Empire, not just the electors he represented. Therefore, the Americans would have no representation in Parliament. In 1773 the British decided to tax tea. They granted the British East India Company to ship their goods