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The laws of the government of Great Britain can be broken, but it is totally impossible to break the laws of nature.
The Tea Act, The Sugar Act, The Townshend Act, The Quartering Act, and The Stamp Act.
The British passed a lot of laws during the French and Indian War but colonists generally ignored them because the soldiers were to busy with war to enforce them. When the war ended there were a ton of soldiers with nothing better to do than enforce the law. Britain passes a ton of new to pay for the war.
quartering laws
Nope - Great Britain is divided into countries, which are further divided into counties. However - unlike american states, British counties do not set their own laws.
to gain money
why did American think that the new laws from Great Britain were unfair.
The laws of the government of Great Britain can be broken, but it is totally impossible to break the laws of nature.
The Tea Act, The Sugar Act, The Townshend Act, The Quartering Act, and The Stamp Act.
only people in great Britain should write laws in parliament
well to strat with the revolutionary war was a war caused mainly by the French and Indian war. England or back then called Great Britain won the war. they won the war but lost a good deal of money. so the Parliament of Britain passed tax laws. this made colonists angry.in which caused them to go to war with Britain. so i guess if there was no French and Indian war (also known as the 7 years war) history might have been different.
Passes laws for the country
Britain enforced mercantilist laws after the French and Indian War to maintain control over its colonies and maximize economic benefits. The war left Britain in debt and they believed strict trade regulations would help generate revenue and ensure colonies were serving British interests. By restricting colonial trade, Britain aimed to prevent competition and secure resources for its own economic growth.
No
After incurring heavy debt from wars with France including the Seven Years Wars and the French and Indian Wars, Britain decided to recoup its losses by setting up a mercantile system in its wealthy Atlantic coast colonies. Harsh tax laws like the Stamp and Townshend Acts drew a very negative response from colonists. These hostilities eventually led to the Thirteen Colonies War of Independence against Great Britain.
Edward Dwyer has written: 'A compendium of the principal laws and regulations relating to the militia of Great Britain & Ireland' -- subject(s): Great Britain, Great Britain. Army. Militia
Great Britain