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Question
in your opinion, was the boston massacre a true massacre by the british, or was it justified self-defense? explain your answer choice.
The Boston Massacre (1770) involved British soldiers firing on a crowd of colonists, killing five. From the colonists' perspective, it was a massacre: the soldiers used excessive force against unarmed or minimally aggressive civilians (like snowball - throwing, taunting). Propaganda (e.g., Paul Revere's engraving) emphasized British brutality to rally anti - British sentiment. From the British view, soldiers were provoked (crowd was hostile, throwing objects, threatening), so it was self - defense. Historically, the term “massacre” is debated, but the colonists’ framing (to advance the independence cause) and the relatively low death toll (vs. typical massacres) make it a contested event. A strong case for “massacre” (from the colonial narrative) is that the soldiers’ response was disproportionate to the crowd’s actions, and it became a key propaganda tool for the American Revolution.
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In my opinion, the Boston Massacre was a true massacre by the British (though the term is debated). The British soldiers fired on a civilian crowd that was mainly taunting and throwing snowballs, not posing a lethal threat. Five colonists were killed, and the event was used as propaganda (e.g., Paul Revere’s engraving) to show British brutality, helping to galvanize colonial opposition to British rule. While the soldiers claimed self - defense due to crowd provocation, their use of deadly force against a largely non - violent (or minimally violent) crowd was disproportionate, fitting the colonists’ view of a massacre.