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LBRY Claims • Meditation---Passion-Flowers

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16 Jun 2021 03:18:16 UTC
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Lillies June 15, 2021
The year was 1774...

Across all 13 colonies, Americans were getting righteously pissed off at the British government and committing various acts of rebellion and sabotage.

The British Crown had imposed new, high taxes on them following the French and Indian War.

It claimed the colonists had to pay higher taxes because they had protected the colonists from the French up in Canada.

But the colonists saw that war for what it was - an expensive way for the British government to expand its power and dominion (sounds awfully like the American Empire today, doesn't it?).

The colonists didn't feel like their needs were being met or their concerns were being taken into consideration.

The famous slogan "No taxation without representation" was born.

Colonists threw British tea in the harbor to protest taxes.

The desire for independence grew swiftly.

Then, in 1775 in North Carolina, the colonists' militia - the Minutemen - squared off with British Redcoats and drew fire on each other.

No one knows who shot first, but this moment became the "shot heard 'round the world."

The American Revolution began.

Most colonists didn't want to break away from British rule. They would've rather reconciled their differences, settled on appropriate tax rates, and be allowed to go back to their lives.

But by January 1776, news emerged that King George III wanted to crush the small but growing rebellion and was in the process of strengthening his army and navy.

That same month, Thomas Paine published "Common Sense," in which he passionately argues that independence is a "natural right" of all peoples and the only sensible course for the colonies to pursue.

He convinced thousands of colonists to join the fight.

In March 1776, North Carolina held a revolutionary convention that became the first to vote in favor of independence.

By mid-May, seven other colonies had followed suit.

On June 7, following a heated debate about the colonies' independence during a meeting at the Pennsylvania State House, a five-man committee was appointed to draft a formal document justifying a break from Great Britain.

That document would become the Declaration of Independence.

On July 2nd, 12 of the 13 colonies adopted a resolution to be independent.

And on July 4th, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was completed and signed.

This moment in history was the first time a nation of people formally decided to rule themselves and put the power of government into the hands of "the people" rather than a king or queen.

It asserted the revolutionary concept of "ALL men" being "equal."

Endowed with "unalienable rights" from their "Creator."

Asserting the "Right of the People" to alter or abolish the government and "institute new Government" if it becomes too tyrannical.

It's hard to overstate how incredibly radical this document was and still is.

A truly groundbreaking moment in human history.

The birth of libertarianism and self-government.
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