Additionally, the last important causes is these laws not only attempted to force colonies admit Crown’s monarchy authority impose to the colonists’ duties, but also in the affect of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense awaken colonies’ ideology of protecting their equal rights and freedom. Since the Stamp acts, current acts, colonists alerted ever more taxes could follow and feared British will impose stronger acts to against their resistance, eventually would threat their rights and freedom. However, the infuriation growing stronger and the resistance were unavoidable as British imposed colonists more taxation without their consent. First, Colonies were part of the empire, colonists should be treated as the citizens in Great Britain, and enjoy the …show more content…
Meanwhile, these acts removed jurisdiction in the vice-admiralty courts and forcing colonies pay additional taxes against colonists will. No doubt the Parliament ignored colonists’ citizen right and show no respect and mercy to the colonists were part of British citizen, to maximum their power to limit or control colonies’ economic activities only service British government’s interests. Therefore, colonists boycotted the new duty on tea and protested British’s East India Tea Company a monopoly on the colonies’ tea trade the later on Boston Tea Party, showed colonies no need to royal to a government that show no respect to its people and seeing colonists as tool to solve its financial problem, satisfy their greatest selfish to benefit the Crown and British merchants. Forth, revolution was necessarily to protect their collective freedom from property and rights no continue harmed by imposing more additional acts and taxation to the colonists without their