During the apex of colonial America Thomas Jefferson wrote a document that severed the ties with Britain and started the revolutionary era. The declaration was designed to free the American colonists from the British sovereignty. This independence was justified in the list of grievances committed by King George on the American people, such as not having representation and being forced to pay unreasonable taxes. To help justify this independence further the Declaration of Independence also highlighted certain and paramount ideals that were beholden to the people of the new nation. These ideals included the consent of the governed, inalienable rights, and equality, all of which were essential to the new character that developed within the United …show more content…
These rights are self-evident and now beholden to all people within the United States regardless of race, ethnicity, or gender. Andrew Sullivan wrote about his beliefs in his article “Life, Liberty, and The Pursuit of Happiness” which highlights the virtues of all the inalienable rights. He represents the belief of all Americans when he says that “I believe in life… I believe in liberty… I believe in the pursuit of happiness.” This shows that these ideals are still very much alive within the United States and they date all the way back to the Declaration of Independence, the birth of our nation. Sullivan puts into words that a government “should put liberty at the center of its concerns” and this shows how the inalienable rights are an essential ideal within the Declaration of Independence that is still well known and respected, The inalienable rights are the one thing that all people on Earth share, we all have the rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, which can never be taken away from