In one word - TAXES - they especially resented taxation without representation in Parliament
none of the above
All colonists would have had a grievance against the British government by April 1775. This was due to the invasions that the British troops conducted, the unfair taxation on products needed by the colonists, and other such unfair treatment that the British were passing to these people.
The British government taxed the American colonists to an extreme and treated them unfairly. The colonists even drew up a document stating their grievances against the King and when it was ignored they rebelled. But it was mainly taxes.
none, all colonists were highly and strictly against all the undecided taxation rules the british had layed upon the colonists without it being even addressed in the Parliament.
The colonists that would have been unlikely to hold grievances against the British in 1775 would be the Tories. They were loyal to the king. In fact, many of them moved to Canada during the Revolutionary War.
The third part of the Declaration list the colonists complaints against the British government. King George lll is singled out for blame.
Samuel Adams revived the Sons of Liberty to continue circulating grievances against the British government.
That they will go to war
The List of Grievances was a document included in the Declaration of Independence that outlined the colonists' complaints against the British government. It listed specific injustices and violations of their rights that justified their decision to break away and declare independence.
I cant
list of grievances against the king of England and the british parialment
The Declaration of Independence justified the patriot's break from Great Britain by identifying specific grievances against King George III and the British government. It argued that the colonists had the right to establish their own government based on principles of natural rights and consent of the governed. It also asserted that repeated attempts to address these grievances were met with indifference or oppression, leaving the colonists no choice but to declare their independence.