Response To The Declaration Of Independence

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The Declaration of Independence started the idea of a revolution and a shift in power from the monarch to the people. The document was drafted by Thomas Jefferson and signed by representatives from each of the thirteen original colonies with New York holding out the longest. Fighting had already started when The Declaration of Independence was written. That said, the colonies had not formally decided to fight for their independence until after the document was created. The document expressed the colonist’s grievances of the numerous unjust laws set into place by the king and, that the result of these laws are the colonies breaking away from Britain rule. The Declaration of Independence is still relevant in the lives of those living in America and those who also live outside America. …show more content…

“The congress passed over the preamble with little comment, as though the startling ideas…were indeed ‘self-evident truths’.”1 The representatives also acknowledged not only had the king implemented laws that were wrong but also did not allowing laws that need to be passed. “He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.”2 This introduction allowed for America’s identity to be based on freedom and the equality of all. Without this piece of The Declaration of Independence America would likely not be the melting pot it has become. The idea of God given right was also influential in the fight for women’s right and later on in the civil rights movement. More recently in the fight for gay marriage the argument was helped by this basic concept. In addition, the constitution was set out to protect the American People’s God given right and is still the law of the land in

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