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What Are The Consequences Of The Declaration Of Independence

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The Declaration of Independence was a document published on July 4, 1776 written by the United States to Britain declaring freedom and self-authority. The document consisted of reasons that described Britain’s noncompliance to America’s needs in governing. Britain and America had a Mother and child government relationship, until that relationship became unbeneficial and untrue to the United States. Therefore, the reasoning of the perception that America had with the relationship to the British Empire was parasitical in forms of taxes and unconsented consequences. This parasitical relationship was important in the consideration of breaking all ties with the ‘mother country’ because America was suffering, while only Britain was feeding off and gaining benefits.
An instance of Britain being a parasite to America is shown through “internal taxes” as told in an interview by the House of Commons; a British Parliament house to Benjamin Franklin, a politician in 1766. An internal tax is an involuntary tax placed on colonists, something that is beyond their control. An example of an internal tax is shown in the stamp act where all paper …show more content…

In Britain’s perspective, the tax was necessary because the British had debts to pay off after the Seven Years War. The Seven Years War was a war from 1754 to 1763 amongst the British and the French, both with Indian allies. The war’s enormous debt was placed on colonists through large taxes like the Stamp Act, as told in the Textbook Entry from Eric Foner’s Give Me Liberty even though the war was based around the enemy of the British. The reasoning for the internal tax itself furthermore explains the parasitical relationship, because even after the war, Britain saw the colonies as “subordinates whose main role was to enrich the mother country” rather than ‘children’ who needed

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