The English back home were not treating the colonists fairly
There was an American Revolution between 1776 and 1783. The war was a protest against English rule and trade restrictions with the intent to gain freedom from the English. The understanding that the colonies could govern themselves was not accepted in Europe.
They weren’t “mean”. The king owned the colonies and everyone was a subject of the king. They all were English and under English rule.
Lenient
The British ruled the colonies using the English structures of governance. This is what led to various protests revolutions as the leadership did not augur well with the residents of these colonies.
home rule
There was an American Revolution between 1776 and 1783. The war was a protest against English rule and trade restrictions with the intent to gain freedom from the English. The understanding that the colonies could govern themselves was not accepted in Europe.
sorry but i have no answer person/weirdo
They weren’t “mean”. The king owned the colonies and everyone was a subject of the king. They all were English and under English rule.
The 13 colonies were under the rule of the English king.
Lenient
The colonies were revolting to get rid od the English rule over them.
The British ruled the colonies using the English structures of governance. This is what led to various protests revolutions as the leadership did not augur well with the residents of these colonies.
No. The 4th is only an American holiday to celebrate the independence of the colonies from English rule.
The patriots fought for the Colonies, or the United States to be free from English rule given the rights to govern themselves.
To Rule the World and become everlasting omega rulers!
gandhi used the rule of ahisma to protest that mean he used non-violence in all of his protests
The government had been English and English law was what was used to rule the colonies. Rather than totally change what everyone was used to and what the lawyers in the colonies had been trained to work with, it made sense to have them remain in force.