Nothing is perfect in this world. Time after time, history has proven that citizens are never completely satisfied with their respective government. Pleasing a population in which everybody is happy is an impossible feat. Unhappy with their government, people decide to congregate revolt for what they believe to be a greater cause. Congregations of people who revolt, such as those who revolted in French Revolution and the American Revolution, have proven to be successful as their motives were eventually made into a reality. A revolution is a desperate remedy in hopes to overthrow an unjust government or social order, usually due to economic hardship or political favoritism. The French Revolution was a revolution in France that focused primarily …show more content…
Before the French and Indian War, nobody assumed that the colonies would revolt against Great Britain and form a nation of their own called America. The colonies were only asked to follow normal regulations and the government did not interfere with them too much. However, following the French and Indian War, King George III, the contemporary King of Great Britain, lost a lot of money due to his participation in the conflict. In order to pay off his outstanding debt, King George III started to impose taxes on the colonies without their consent. Obviously, his actions infuriated the once-peaceful colonists, and they responded to these outrageous laws by boycotting British goods. Hence began the conflict between Great Britain and the colonists. Upset that Great Britain continuously discriminated against their political body, the colonists threw taxed tea from Britain overboard into the sea, which is notoriously known as the “Boston Tea Party”. The King later imposed the “Intolerable Acts” as a response to the rowdy actions of the colonists. The Boston Port Act closed the port of Boston until the Dutch East India Company was paid for the damaged goods. The Massachusetts Government Act put the government of Massachusetts almost exclusively under direct British control. The Administration of Justice Act enabled royal officials to be tried in Britain if the king felt it necessary for fair justice. The Quartering Act ordered colonies to provide lodging for British soldiers. Lastly, the Quebec Act expanded British territory in Canada and guaranteed the free practice of Roman Catholicism. The “Intolerable Acts” were seemingly directed at the colonies, who were already enraged with Great Britain’s prejudice against them. The economic causes of the revolution, aside from a continual taxation of the