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Was The Revolutionary War Inevitable Or Inevitable?

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Was The Revolutionary War Inevitable Or Inevitable?
Inevitable Freedom The United States of America could have easily lost the Revolutionary War, along with colonists not constructing the Constitution, but also Colonial Representatives established as a self-governing entity within the British Empire. Amongst all odds, the Colonists managed to pull off their fight for independence from the world’s most notorious empire and military in the world at that time. If the British were to maintain consistency of their politics and policies, could the outcome have had the British victorious causing the Colonies to continue to stay under control? The war and independence could have been inevitable or uncertain due to various reasons. Speculating the long-term results if the British had achieved victory in the Revolutionary War, it would have been somewhat difficult to maintain the colonies indefinitely. As Thomas Paine wrote in Common Sense, “...the notion of a relatively tiny island ruling a land so great in both territory and population in perpetuity was a difficult one to reconcile.” It’s not very difficult to reconcile that, …show more content…
It was inevitable because in Charleston the cargo was left to rot on the docks.In Boston the Royal Governor was stubborn and held the ships in port where the colonists wouldn’t allow them to unload. Cargoes of tea filled the harbor, and the British ship’s crews were stalled in Boston looking for work and often finding themselves into trouble.
Following the Tea Act led to the Boston Tea Party. Where a raid on three British ships in Boston Harbor in which Boston colonists, disguised as Indians, threw the contents of several hundred chests of tea into the harbor as a protest against British taxes on tea and against the monopoly granted East India Company. It was inevitable because the Parliament were so harsh on the Intolerable Acts that the Boston Tea Party

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