Saturday, November 23, 2019
Capital Punishment Essays - American Revolution, Salutary Neglect
Capital Punishment Essays - American Revolution, Salutary Neglect    Capital Punishment      From 1763, throughout the mid-1770s an ideology of revolution began to  evolve throughout the thirteen American colonies. Many factors contributed  to the formation of this ideology including Salutary Neglect, the Boston  Massacre, and the British tax policy.  In the early 1700s the British neglected the colonists because neglect  served the British economic interests better than strict enforcement. The  colonies prospered as did their trade with Britain, without much government  interference. But, at the end of the French and Indian war, British leaders  reevaluated their relationship with the colonies; because of conflicts between  Great Britain and the colonies during the war, ending the policy of salutary  neglect and proposing reforms and new taxes.   The war had left Great Britain deeply in debt and the British viewed  American prosperity as a resource and taxing the colonies as a means to  relieve British debt. More and more Americans were convinced that British  politicians were deliberately robbing them of their personal independence  through taxation. The Stamp Act of 1765 which required the colonists to buy  and place revenue stamps on all official legal documents, deeds, newspapers,  pamphlets, dice, and playing cards, left the colonists alarmed and the   educated colonists mounted an ideological attack on the new British policies.  The colonists believed that the Stamp Act was an attempt by Britain to seize  control of taxation from the representative colonial assemblies and to tax the  colonists without giving them representation in government; taxation without  representation.  While confrontations over taxes and reforms were serious, the bonds  uniting the colonies and Britain were still strong. An American diplomat  declared in 1769 that the British ministry should Repeal the laws, Renounce  the Right, Recall the troops, Refund the money, and return to the old method  of requisition. This solution would have required parliament to renounce its  claims to sovereign power in America and was almost unthinkable given its  quest for authority. Moreover, violent acts such as the Boston Massacre, in  which soldiers fired at colonists after some boys threw ice at a sentry  guarding the Customs House; killing an African American named Crispus  Attucks and four other colonists, showed how difficult it would be to achieve  any peaceful constitutional compromise.  These main factors as well as many others, played into the hands of  those Americans who wanted independence. They saw the British as corrupt,  immoral, and power hungry and they felt they needed to take a stand against  the pattern of enslavement they saw in these actions. They did not see  themselves as radicals or revolutionaries; they were simply protecting their  way of life, their land, and their households. Thus brought about the  formation of the ideology for a revolution.    
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