Wednesday, March 18, 2020
The History of Freedom in America essays
The History of Freedom in America essays    Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine and J. Hector St. de Crevecoeur each     offer a unique perspective about certain truths concerning American rights     and responsibilities.  Each author offers a promise of what America could     and should be.  Martin Luther King, Jr. and Elizabeth Cady Stanton are two     prominent figures from America's recent past that also spoke out in regards     to American's rights and responsibilities with the awe-inspiring "I have a     Dream" speech and the "Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions".      The Declaration of Independence is probably the most important     document in American history.  The Declaration revealed all     the monstrous things that the king of England had done to the colonists and     all the reasons why the United States had to become its own entity and     become free from British rule.  Great Britain had been violating the rights     of the colonists by imposing taxes, not allowing them to represent     themselves in parliament, not allowing them to pass laws and a great many     more terrible offenses.  All the colonists wanted to do was to live     peacefully and prosperously and to be able to govern themselves, but the     British king would not allow this to happen.  The Declaration of     Independence summed up all of these actions to show the king and the     government why it was necessary for the colonists to separate from England.      The Declaration was also used as a propaganda tool for the American's to     state their reasons for rebellion and try to get other colonists to join     them in their fight for freedom.  Jefferson declares, "We hold these truths     to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed     by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are     Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness." (Jefferson, Paragraph 2)     Jefferson's emphasis on the fact that the Declaration represents the will     of the people to take actions immediately against the k...     
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