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It depends on from which side you look at it from. The Colonists felt that it was unfair because up until that time period they hadn't been taxed by England, due to salutary neglect. However, the Colonists did cause the French-Indian War. This war costed England a lot of money. The only way to pay for the war was to tax the nation's subjects. England had every right to tax the Colonies. Furthermore, citizens living in England itself were paying higher taxes for a war the Colonies started.

So the Stamp Act was reasonable and fair, but the Colonists did not feel that way.

Any tax is "fair" if it passed by representatives elected by the people who will be taxed. The colonists were justified in claiming the tax was unfair since they were subjected to "taxation without representation."

DIFFERENT SIDE OF THE DEBATE:

Ant tax is "fair" if the tax is enacted by representatives elected by the people who will be taxed. The colonists were justified in claiming the tax was not fair since they were subjected to "taxation without representation".

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8y ago
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7y ago

From the point of view of British politicians the Stamp Act was fair in that the Colonies were expected to help pay for their own defense. The issue was the French and Indian War. In North America and world-wide, the British and the French were battling for world supremacy. England came out on top, however, the costs of the wars with France were a burden on the English treasury.
The British argument that the Stamp Act was fair is logic turned upside down. The American colonies were an extension of the British Empire. With that said, it was Britain's decision to fight the French in North America. For its own interests it was a good fight. But the war expenses belonged to the Empire not the colonists. In addition it was not fair because the American colonists had no voice in Parliament.

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Q: Was the British Stamp Act an unreasonable and unfair tax on the American colonies?
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