From 1763 to 1775, Great Britain and the British Colonists were in constant disagreement.Britain and Parliament thought of the colonists as beneath them and that their purpose was to serve them.The British Colonists insisted they were full British citizens and demanded equal rights.They did not think it was fair of Britain to tax them without fair representation, and recognized the fact that Britain did not see them as equals.The Colonists ignored their obligations to the mother country because they felt if they could not be seen as equal citizens and treated fairly then to what obligation did they have to Britain and Parliament.The British-American anti-tax militants resisted Parliament, but indeed they had valid reasoning, if Britain and Parliament could so easily tax the colonists without equal representation, then
From 1763 to 1775, Great Britain and the British Colonists were in constant disagreement.Britain and Parliament thought of the colonists as beneath them and that their purpose was to serve them.The British Colonists insisted they were full British citizens and demanded equal rights.They did not think it was fair of Britain to tax them without fair representation, and recognized the fact that Britain did not see them as equals.The Colonists ignored their obligations to the mother country because they felt if they could not be seen as equal citizens and treated fairly then to what obligation did they have to Britain and Parliament.The British-American anti-tax militants resisted Parliament, but indeed they had valid reasoning, if Britain and Parliament could so easily tax the colonists without equal representation, then