QUESTION IMAGE
Question
part 3
question: which principle do you believe britain violated the most, and why was that
violation enough to justify independence?
answer(?):
In the context of American independence, Britain violated the principle of "consent of the governed" (from social contract theory) most. Colonists had no representation in British Parliament but were taxed (e.g., Stamp Act). This violated their right to consent to governance, as per Locke’s ideas—governments derive legitimacy from the governed’s consent. The lack of representation meant their rights (life, liberty, property) were threatened, so independence was justified to re - establish a government with their consent.
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Britain most violated the principle of "consent of the governed" (from social contract theory). Colonists had no representation in British Parliament yet were taxed (e.g., Stamp Act). Per Locke's ideas, governments need the governed's consent for legitimacy. The lack of representation threatened colonists' rights (life, liberty, property), so this violation justified seeking independence to form a government with their consent.