Civil Disobedience In Colonial America

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Where would we be as a society if we were still colonial Great Britain? What would our nation look like if we would’ve listened to George Washington in his farewell address and never established the political parties that have divided our country? Would America be better? Would it be worse? We’ll never know if it happens. However, what we are aware of is the nature of humans disobeying authority based on their own beliefs and opinions. Disobedience can act in many different ways, whether it’s a small-scale fight between a teenager and their parents, or it goes all the way back to 1848 at the Seneca Falls Convention when Elizabeth Cady Santon was speaking out against the government and society of America in order to establish the representation …show more content…
To initiate, disobedience has always been relevant in the making of the world we see today. Most clearly seen in colonial America when the colonists were lashing out against the British Monarchy. This was seen through the Stamp Act, Quartering Act, Boston Tea Party, etc. Disobedience also played a key role in the transition from the Articles of Confederation, in which our nation was fully settled, to bring to light the change into what is now the Constitution. Without the disobedience of Americans in the 1780s to bring forth issues of state laws vs. federal laws and governmental restrictions, we as a society wouldn’t have been able to adapt, change and become what we are in the world today. This is seen, less commonly known, in what was Bacon’s Rebellion from 1676-1677. When Nathaniel Bacon led a militiaman in conquest, to drive Native Americans out of northern Virginia. This led to prove that the power of the English government was little to none. Although, happening 100 years before what was the American Revolution, this event was still a leading driver for the independence Americans were seeking from Great