The stiff standstill of the colonies between the colonists’ ideal of independence and policies from the British had only been found through the absence of complications that taxes weren’t meant to be compelling them without representation, which conformed to rebellious motives such as boycotts, though not limited to so. On the night of March 5th, 1770, after the jobs of the colonists were no longer in their grasp, they formed crowds at the customhouse, throwing rocks, which ended up scaring the British soldiers. And one of them ended up firing a gun, which ended up hitting Crispus Attucks, a mulatto worker, before more were killed, but by the time it was over, five were dead. In essence, the British had …show more content…
In the summer of 1765, Ebenezer MacIntosh led a mob to destroy the new brick warehouse (house) of Andrew Oliver, a rich Boston Merchant. And two weeks later, they went to Thomas Hutchinson’s home, who was the brother-in-law of Oliver and a prominent defender of imperial authority. They ended up breaking his furniture, looting his wine cellar, and setting his library on fire. Thus, it is their motive to prevent or stop the suffering of the colonists that’s inflicted by the British who only wanted to pay the debts they created, leading to the use of violence just so they could drive the British out of America. There were cases where colonists had sought and done to officials, a tax collector was covered in tar and feathers, but in another instance five hundred farmers went to tax collector Jared Ingersoll and forced him into resigning from office in the “cause of the people”. Although, it is best to mention how they used meticulously ways of making misery out of the officials into the need for them to actually resign from, but like it might just of meant that if the “peaceful” ways to kick them out lead to poor results of so; therefore, they decided to challenge the officials’ willingness of staying there by doing demonstrations that be pointed as unsafe because the colonists sought that why should they be here if as colonists living