In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson is able to reason in order to clearly communicate the colonies’ grievances and the need to segregate from the overly controlling and demanding grip of King George III. Jefferson is able to appropriately use logos by explicitly stating the people of the colonies’ rationales for severing their connections to Great Britain. He elaborates on his complaints and requests by using logos in order to declare and represent the people’s interpretation of their rights, what they should be, and why they deserve them. He articulates that the King has neglected and deprived the people of the colonies from their god given rights as people. In the first section of the document Jefferson asserts “it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them,” in this quote Jefferson clearly voices that it’s time for the colonies to “dissolve the political bands” from the motherland that has both spoonfed and disciplined them. His justification for this is provided when he establishes that they have the natural born rights from the “Laws of Nature and Nature’s God entitle them,” which King George III has outright deprived from …show more content…
In hopes of being able to gain support for their potential future war effort he explicitly makes endeavors to exploit that voice of reason by specifically stating what their interpretation of rights are, what they should be, why they deserve them, and how King George overstepped his boundaries. Jefferson’s use of logos was a fundamental component in later gaining foreign support, that of especially from