There were many causes and situations that led to the eruption of the French Revolution, but the essential pieces to the puzzle were the lack of basic human rights such as freedom of religion, property, press, personal liberty, and equality, absence of a representative government combined with the hatred of the upper two estates, and the intense taxation imposed on the third estate. These main three instigating factors were the motivators to push the common man to revolt against the noblemen and government officials. A life without essential human rights is a life most would not want to lead. Equality is such a fundamental ideal of the western world, “But as the essence of the republic or of democracy is equality, it follows that the love of country necessarily includes the love of equality.” (Robespierre 1) and before this revolution, it wasn’t common in many places. Slavery in the Americas had reached a new height during the French Revolution, so the people had to fight for the equality of everyone. …show more content…
“... he no longer belongs to the common order. His new interest is opposed to the general interest; he has no right to vote in the name of the people.” (Sources 296) illustrates that the nobles were representing the common man, and people did not like that any more. “What is a Nation? A body of associates living under a common law and represented b the same legislature.” (Sources 295) The French people wanted fair representation, and not the broken system of bidding for government jobs. This frustration turns into hate. “All, but an all that is free and flourishing. Nothing can be done without it [the Third Estate]; everything would be infinitely better without the other two orders.” (Sources 295) To believe that everything would be better without the upper classes can only be drawn from a hate and frustration so deep that one becomes irrational and