the king
The Declaration of Independence did not and does not give us any rights. It was a list of grievances the colonists had against King George the III and their declaration, or statement of intent, that they were rebelling or seceding from Great Britain. The US Constitution provides some rights, such as Habeas Corpus, but most of our individual rights come in the Bill of Rights (1st ten Amendments to the Constitution) and a few other Amendments. For example, the 1st Amendment covers freedom of Religion, Speech, Assembly, Press, and Petition, the 2nd Amendment is the right to bear arms, the 4th Amendment prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures, etc. The 14th Amendment is an important one too - it guarantees due process and equal protection under the laws.
The phrase "it's too late to apologize" is often associated with the song "Apologize" by OneRepublic, but in a historical context, it could refer to the colonists telling the British government that it was too late for reconciliation after a series of grievances had led to escalating tensions. By the time the Declaration of Independence was signed in 1776, the colonists felt that their rights had been ignored and that meaningful dialogue was no longer possible. Therefore, they declared their intention to separate and establish their own governance.
It is possible. Usually you will have to send them a check, for the rights, and they can send you the rights. Of course, sometimes a theater will get denied it it is too close to another theater performing the same thing.
To emphasize that women should have the same rights as men
George Mason authored the Virginia Declaration of Rights and would not sign the Constitution. He refused because the Constitution lacked a bill of rights, and he was of the opinion it would give too much power to the government.
- King George III violated the rights of the colonists by taxing and passing unfair laws; British army violated the colonists rights too
yes, and then the ammendements that were made were added to the bill of rights, as the way in which the Declaration of Independance (constitution) was written it was made far too hard to add/change what was written. So changes were then added to the bill of rights.
The United States of America. Another result was the American Revolution.
The Declaration of Independence is not that long and is easy to read. It basically first states who "We" were, drawing together all colonists as a "united" people. Second, it lists the peoples grievances: you tax us too much; we have no voice in governing ourselves; we're tired of how you treat us as subjects to the British Crown. Then it declares the colonists' (and our) Independence. Take 10 minutes and read it.
It's don't work too send gifts too clubs...
There is no age too old to send a letter.
The amount of grievances would too long to list. In short you could say that the British were ruling Ireland not the Irish ruling themselves, so they wanted independence.