Parliament passed the Currency Act of 1764 which forbade the colonies from issuing paper currency; which made it more difficult for colonists to pay their debt. Right after the Currency Act was passed the Stamped Acts was passed and colonists had to pay for stamps to send legal documents and other goods. Many colonists quickly protested these taxes arguing that they represented an internal tax, or a tax against property, which they deemed unconstitutional because they were not represented in Parliament. Also the Sugar Act was passed which required you to pay a tax of six pence per gallon on the importation of foreign molasses. These colonists believed constitutionally that Parliament could legislate these external taxes because they did not directly tax their property but could not legislate internal taxes. Since the colonists had no representative in Parliament they had no way of knowing what amount of revenue was required to successfully defray these expenses and so it appeared Parliament now had a way to indefinitely pass tax after tax against the
Parliament passed the Currency Act of 1764 which forbade the colonies from issuing paper currency; which made it more difficult for colonists to pay their debt. Right after the Currency Act was passed the Stamped Acts was passed and colonists had to pay for stamps to send legal documents and other goods. Many colonists quickly protested these taxes arguing that they represented an internal tax, or a tax against property, which they deemed unconstitutional because they were not represented in Parliament. Also the Sugar Act was passed which required you to pay a tax of six pence per gallon on the importation of foreign molasses. These colonists believed constitutionally that Parliament could legislate these external taxes because they did not directly tax their property but could not legislate internal taxes. Since the colonists had no representative in Parliament they had no way of knowing what amount of revenue was required to successfully defray these expenses and so it appeared Parliament now had a way to indefinitely pass tax after tax against the