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    Evan Yip Dr. Clausen-Brown ENGL 122 21 April 2017 Declaration of Independence‚ Only for Men?: A Comparison of Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence and Stanton’s Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions Over two hundred years ago a small group of men broke away from a world super power to become an independent‚ sovereign‚ nation. A mere hundred years later the document penned and used to break relations with that super power was being used to break the bonds of traditional and cultural stereotypes

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    and economic changes was the signing of the Declaration of Independence. This changed the course of American history. This led to United States independence from Britain. What this declaration established was a basic natural rights to all Americans. This document is relevant in today society. This was a declaration that had separate the 13 colonies from Great Britain. What this declaration stated was grievance against the British. The declaration was written by one founding father. 56 men

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    Thomas Jefferson is known as the writer of the Declaration of Independence‚ written in the year of 1776. The Declaration of Independence was a statement of the colonists’ freedom from the rule of the British monarchy. In the Declaration‚ Jefferson listed the inalienable rights‚ which were life‚ liberty‚ and the pursuit of happiness. The inalienable rights were the rights that were naturally given to man‚ and the British monarchy could not take them away. The key arguments that Thomas Jefferson made

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    In 1775‚ Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence. There is no American document with the same global impact. It has been the oldest document and the first to use the name ’’the United States of America.’’ In this concept‚ the Declaration was the birth testimonial of the American nation. The intention of the Declaration of Independence was to manifest and interpret why the thirteen Colonies were breaking away from Great Britain’s authority as well as the rights and forces which people

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    Comparison Paper 2 Abstract The Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution have common themes and one could have not been created without the other. However‚ we had to claim our freedom first to establish order. At the same time‚ the Biblical Worldview clashed with a Naturalistic/ Rationalist Worldview which our founding fathers were influe nced by. This would help shape our nation and laws. Comparison Paper 3 The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution are two separate

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    The Influence of Locke’s Social Contract on The Declaration of Independence During the 1700s the American settlers suffered the abuses from their Mother England‚ and constantly fought through the rebellious spirit that lived within them. As their last hopes for independence dissolved by the greediness of the king‚ a man raised his voice‚ encouraging his subalterns to defend their freedoms. Richard Henry Lee proclaimed‚ “that these United Colonies are‚ and of right ought to be‚ free and independent

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    The two documents that stirred up controversy during 1776 were The Declaration of Independence and Common Sense. These documents started to put the pressure against the government and it eventually led to the thirteen colonies gaining independence from Britain and the creation of a democratic society. In order for these documents to have the effect that they had on society it was crucial that the message be properly delivered. As much as these documents were connected and seem to help elevate the

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    Thomas Paine‚ authors of The Declaration of Independence and The Crisis No.1‚ respectively. The Declaration of Independence‚ written in order to inform the British of the United States’ secession from their rule‚ gave the colonists a logical explanation for fighting against the enemy. On the other hand‚ The Crisis No.1

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    opinion‚ Americans only know the basic details about the declaration of independence. Americans do not consider the declaration of independence as important as how it was in the past. The reader can deduce this when she says “Since our attention is usually called to that opening shot‚ most of us think of the Declaration as being no more disturbing or personally demanding than a nicely HBO lit special of 1776”( Wolf 632). For Americans‚ the declaration means life‚ liberty and happiness. Wolf’s says “To

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    "The Declaration of Independence" was written in 1776 by Thomas Jefferson to declare the colonies free and independent from Great Britain. Jefferson used deductive reasoning in the form of a syllogism to argue his claim that because the colonist’s "unalienable rights" (612) were being denied by Great Britain‚ the colonies were breaking free from Great Britain’s rule to form their own free and independent states. Jefferson gave evidence of the king’s tyranny against the colonies to effectively support

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