Tea Party protests

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    It always has been controversial if peaceful protest is the way to proving one’s point. Nonviolent resistance has been in effect for centuries. Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, and the Danish resistance are all examples, but surely not the only people who have protested peacefully. Gene Sharp is known for his in-depth studies and writings on nonviolent resistance. Sharp’s theories have influenced anti-government resistance movements globally. Sharp believes that having a big,…

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    which avoided strict enforcement of parliamentary laws to keep American colonies obedient to Great Britain, ended. However, following the war, the British began heavily taxing the colonists because of debt, putting various acts such as the Stamp and Tea Act into effect and the Proclamation of 1763, which was implemented by King George. Therefore, the French and Indian War created negligent relations among the colonists and Great Britain and tensions…

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    began his 200 mile march to protest the British salt act? The British salt acts prohibited Indians from collecting or selling salt, which was a major problem because salt played an important role in their diet. Along with this Salt Act, citizens were forced to buy vital minerals from the British at a very high price, with heavy taxes added. Civil disobedience is the refusal to comply with certain laws or to pay taxes and fines, as a peaceful form of political protest, and it’s important because…

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    and boycott the English goods considered to be the spirit of an “Englishmen”. The colonist would have none of this would later be famous protest that will stay in the hearts for years to come and that was the “Boston Tea Party”. In 1773, American colonists disguised as Native Americans and boarded the East India Company ships in Boston Harbor and threw crates of tea overboard; this was the spirit of a revolution, change, and the spirit of an “American”. The British were outraged they were losing…

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    The Pre-War Era

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    British in attempt to raise revenue. The Tea Act was passed in 1773 by British parliament, which granted the East India Company a monopoly on tea in the colonies. This was done in Britain’s attempt to enforce their bailout policy on the East India Company because it had a lot of debt. The actual tax on tea came in the 1767 Townshend Revenue Act, which also placed taxes on glass, paper, oil, and lead. What angered the colonists most, was the fact that the Tea Act was the East India Company’s…

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    British Missteps Analysis

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    to raise revenue for the new military force, but the colonists did not want to pay for an army they did not ask for. The Townshend Tea Tax placed an import duty on glass, lead, paper, paint, and tea in 1767. The colonists believed Britain was trying to stifle their growth and slowly take away the freedom they had. One consequence of the tea tax was the Boston Tea Party, which resulted in a loss of profit for Britain. The colonists in America did not believe in the Virtual Representation Prime…

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    In the beginning, the American Revolution was only a rebellion by British colonists, however, it quickly turned into something much more. The road to the Revolution started with a nine-year war between the French and the British over land in the Ohio River Valley, and ended with the battles in Lexington and Concord between the minutemen and militia. The road to the American Revolution was paved by the French and Indian War, all the acts passed by England, the events in Boston, and the Battles in…

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    The American Revolution occurred due to a chain of events and a complex set of reasons. The most prominent reason that the colonists began protests, boycotts, and petitions against the British was because they believed their rights as British citizens were being violated. A series of actions by the British eventually pushed the colonists over the edge and towards independence. Both the British and the American colonists contributed to causing the American Revolution. The American Revolution…

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    of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” The first amendment states that every American citizen has freedom of speech, religion, press, assembly and protest. Along with the rest of the Bill of Rights, the amendment was submitted to the states for ratification on September 25, 1789, later becoming part of the constitution on December 15, 1791 in Virginia. Written by James Madison, the Bill of Rights…

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    The Boston Tea Party was a political protest on December 16, 1773 that represented the rebellion of the colonies from Great Britain. It was predominantly caused by the colonists’ opposition to being taxed without being represented in Parliament. Britain had placed a tax on the colonists’ tea; this caused the tension between the colonists and Great Britain to rise until it came to a head in the Boston massacre and soon led to the Boston Tea Party. Tea had been frequently imported to the colonies…

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