Especially, after an establishment of the Tea Act, treacherous plan to deceive Americans into buying the obliged tea, embittered colonists dumped thousands of pounds of tea into the port. In consequences, as a punishment for destroying the tea the government issued the Coercive Acts, as well as the Intolerable Acts, which gave ultimate power to the Britain government over the American colonies, by eliminating self-government, limiting town meetings, and assigning an appointive government council, who could currently appoint all judges, sheriffs, and officers. This situation affected to the emergence of the First Continental Congress, which primary concern was equitable treatment from the British superpower; announcing independence had not even crossed the colonists’ minds. However, Thomas Paine’s brochures, Common Sense, assured the colonists to keep trust in the revolution during their struggling to overcome the oppression of British Kingdom, and stimulated a vast dispute about whether American liberty would be safer inside or outside of British control. Furthermore, colonists were doing substantially well with minimal help from the British Empire; announcing independence seemed sensible. The Declaration of Independence supported the natural liberties of the colonists, and it apparently stated that people had the right to oppose when the circumstances are
Especially, after an establishment of the Tea Act, treacherous plan to deceive Americans into buying the obliged tea, embittered colonists dumped thousands of pounds of tea into the port. In consequences, as a punishment for destroying the tea the government issued the Coercive Acts, as well as the Intolerable Acts, which gave ultimate power to the Britain government over the American colonies, by eliminating self-government, limiting town meetings, and assigning an appointive government council, who could currently appoint all judges, sheriffs, and officers. This situation affected to the emergence of the First Continental Congress, which primary concern was equitable treatment from the British superpower; announcing independence had not even crossed the colonists’ minds. However, Thomas Paine’s brochures, Common Sense, assured the colonists to keep trust in the revolution during their struggling to overcome the oppression of British Kingdom, and stimulated a vast dispute about whether American liberty would be safer inside or outside of British control. Furthermore, colonists were doing substantially well with minimal help from the British Empire; announcing independence seemed sensible. The Declaration of Independence supported the natural liberties of the colonists, and it apparently stated that people had the right to oppose when the circumstances are