Dbq Essay On The Declaration Of Independence

679 Words3 Pages

Throughout the history of our nation, we as americans have never been together as a team and just accepted our different beliefs. During the 241 years as a nation there has always been an argument, a controversy, a different belief, etc. This issue has always find a way to separate our nation and keep us apart, the Declaration of Independence was created to help with these issues. This piece will be focusing on the beliefs of equality, unalienable rights, consent of the government, and the ability to alter or abolish the government. These beliefs will always keep our country apart and people of higher power need to find a way to dissolve this. The first of many beliefs is the ability to alter or abolish the government. This belief states that when any form of government becomes destructive, it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it (Document D). It is important for the people to have this power so the government doesn’t become too powerful and for the fact that the people do have some say in what we do as a nation (Document D). To help this cause a group known as the Tea Party assembled. The Tea Party is a group trying to alter things in the federal government and make them more even for the whole population, not just certain groups. Although this …show more content…

This is referred to as “Consent of the Government” and plays a big role in determining what the government does. In reality, the people run the country and it would be smart for the government to take full recognition of this. The consent of the government states that the authority of a government should depend on the consent of the people (Document C). When the government chooses not to take this into account, there can sometimes be negative consequences. An example of this would be in 1989 in Tiananmen Square in China. A large protest was in place and the result ended with 3,000 civilians killed by the government (Document