Independence Essay

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    The Declaration of Independence can be seen as the backbone and the beginning of American Society. Many parts of the declaration have been taken in as a set of guidelines for American government. One major point in the Declaration of Independence is the statement that each human is born with certain unalienable rights including Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness. We believe strongly in this statement and take it to heart as a guiding factor in our government’s structure. Many laws in our…

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    pursuit of Happiness’, the founding principals this country was founded on. Is that not why our founding fathers encrypted this in our Declaration of Independence. These so called “unalienable rights” are essential human rights that should not be denied to anyone, and a government is established to protect those rights. The Declarations of Independence was written in seventeen-seventy six with the trust to the government that they would honor this agreement. It is now the year two thousand…

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    ideas on politics, as many of the early documents are said to be inspired by the ideas in the writings of John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and some of the founding fathers involved in the Continental Congress responsible for the Declaration of Independence were also significant philosophers of the Enlightenment…

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    The Declaration of Independence declared America's freedom from Britain. The founding fathers drafted it on July 4,1786. This is the number one most important thing in American history because it declared our freedom. Freedom was important because Britain was controlling us. We would never be our wonderful country today without it. This is when we became our own country. Without it we would still be stuck with Britain. Jamestown was the very first colony in America that survived.…

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    nation respect internationally. However, the time has come for us to ban together and stand for what is rightfully ours, sovereignty. This land and its freedom is our birthright and the desire to defend it should exist without question. The War for Independence,…

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    not at all easy and completely involved rotating in monotonous circles. Before colonists officially created a document that justified what they were actually fighting for America was in a civil war. No American document besides the Declaration of Independence has created such an impact in government and society, but were the arguments actually valid? Many political statements contain small grains of truths that become skewed. To understand the document…

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    Despite the fact that the War officially ended with the signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1783, the Continental Congress appointed Thomas Jefferson to draft the Declaration of Independence in 1776. Because the colonists felt that their rights had been violated after numerous usurpations by the English monarchy, the Declaration was written to announce to Parliament that the colonies would be free and would undertake their own government founded on democratic principles. Included in the…

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    Nation Worth Living In Independence. When the word independence is said, the statue of liberty, fourth of July, declaration of independence, and moving out, all come to mind. Independence is succeeding from someone or something to make a better life. Children try to be independent when riding a bike or brushing their teeth. Our country is independent from Britain because of the declaration of independence. When children move out of the house and go to college it shows independence.…

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    The Declaration of Independence by Thomas Jefferson is a document written in 1776 that aimed to create equality among all persons on earth and grant everybody certain unalienable rights. Nearly 187 years after this document was written, Martin Luther King Jr. wrote a letter from inside the Birmingham jail addressing the inequality that African American people were facing in the South. Nearly all white people in the South during this time were interpreting the Declaration in different ways that…

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    independent because of their hands-off relations with the Crown, a relationship known as salutary neglect. Any attempts to reassert control of the colonies aggravated them because of this system. Another event that contributed to their feeling of independence was the Glorious Revolution of 1688. During this revolution, King James the II was overthrown by Protestant factions and the Crown fell to William and Mary. Since the King was gone, the result was looser governance over the colonies.…

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