The colonists believed that the truths that were self-evident were: 1)All men are created equal, 2)That they are endowed by their with certain unalienable rights, 3)That among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.
A particular truth is not self-evident means it is not obvious.
The writers of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution were the founding fathers of the United States of America. When those words were written it meant "We believe these truths are true, obvious, self-revealing, and we are hanging on to them." The way they wrote it however has much more power and directness. There situation with the British Royal Rule motivated them to say to King George, "Hey, this is our land and nation. We WILL be self ruling and what you say does not go anymore. You don't have any business taxing us without providing representation and provision. This is self-evident dude."
(ellos) pueden ('ellos' - they - can be omitted if self-evident)
(Ella) necesitaba = She needed ('Ella' can be omitted if self-evident)
I would say the truths were: All Men Are Created Equal Endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness Powers from the consent of the governed Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government. mainly self explain in that section. It seems that in today's world none of those truths have been upheld, we aren't created equal, we aren't allowed to live our lives the way we choose and my pursuit of Happiness, keeps getting blocked by people who are afraid of change.
'(Ella) parece regal'. ((EYah) pahRAYthay rayGALL) ('th' as in 'thin') ('Ella' can be omitted if self-evident who 'she' is; or unless for emphasis)
Because they had been endowed by the Creator and were self evident.
That Britain only did so out of self-interest
Given that it is illegal to use, possess, grow or sell marijuana in Australia, I would say the answer is fairly self-evident: simply stop growing marijuana.
un centenar de verdades
some people think it was just self-defense and some say that it was murder. its also been called just a riot. it just depends on who you ask.
It depends on your perspective. The colonists would say yes. The British would say no.