How Did The Colonists Change Over Time

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The views the colonists had changed drastically during the two decades before the American Revolutionary War. The colonists tried many things before going straight to a revolution. When Parliament did not listen to the colonists complaints this led to tensions. During Martin Luther King Junior’s march on Washington he spoke about many laws and ancient traditions that were causing tensions between Blacks and Whites in America, and this is exactly what the colonists tried to do with Parliament. The colonist decided that the British Parliament was not representing the colonies very well because they were not affected by the laws passed on the colonies, were infringing on the colonies natural rights, and were making new rights that were not part …show more content…

The colonists did not believe that they had much say in Parliament because Parliament would not listen to the colonists when they did not like the laws being passed. When the colonists wanted to let the people in the colonies make the laws Parliament disagreed which caused more tension. Britain said that the colonies could not complain because they were being virtually represented, but this was not the case because when Parliament pass laws on the colonists it did not affect anyone in Parliament because they were not in the colonies. The only people that were being virtually represented by Parliament were the people in England that could not vote because the laws passed for English people affected the members of Parliament. This caused major tensions between Parliament and the Colonists again because the colonies were being heard by the members in Parliament no matter how much they …show more content…

When Parliament started passing all of these new laws they took away many of the rights the colonists had always been given not just from birth. The colonists had never been taxed for every piece of paper they used but this changed with the stamp act and Parliament got angry when the colonists did not like this. Colonists thought that if you left something alone for a while and ignored it it would become a natural right, but when Parliament started taxing paper the colonists couldn't ignore it because it was not something that was a natural right of Parliaments and this made the colonists start to turn towards revolution. The colonists did not want Parliament to keep having a say in the things that went on in the colonies and believed that the colonial government should have a say in what laws and restrictions were going to be passed. During the elections now this same concept is starting to show. Many teenagers want a say in who get elected as president because they are going to be the ones who have to live with it when they become adults. This has started to cause tensions between teenager or young adults and many older people because the generational views on political leaders are changing drastically and most of the older people are not listening to teenagers

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