Did English Parliament Have Taxes

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Did the English Parliament have the right to tax the colonies? After discussing the Stamp Act and doing some research, the English Parliament did not have the right to tax. Taxes were pressed due to the Seven Year War. This war lasted from 1756-1763 and was fought between the British and the French. This war was very costly and hurt England’s economy. Finding reasons why the British should not have taxed was easy, and here are just a few of them.
The Seven year War, also known as The French and Indian war, became much more expensive than the British expected and they had to find a way for financial stability. Pauline Maier states, “We're talking about people [the American colonists] with enormous sensitivity to the dangers of power. If you conceded the right to Parliament to tax and if there was no check on it, no limit, it could go on indefinitely.” Taxes were a great way to regain their losses and the colonists were defenseless against the British at this time. America’s economy was briskly increasing, and was exceeding England’s. The British recognized how well the New World was doing and how well they were advancing. So why shouldn’t
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Some wanted a fresh start for the money, some for religious viewings, and others due to political scrutiny. The English parliament was relevant to the colonists, they had been taking care of most of their own affairs fifty years prior to taxation. They were a separate nation that could handle most of their own issues, so why were they still getting orders from the British government. Americans were only reliant on England’s imports, which I do believe they could have done by the late of the 1800’s. They had the land that was perfect for agricultural demands, and England recognized that. They wanted their independence from the British government, which will not take place until the Declaration of Independence is signed in 1776 while the American Revolution was taking