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human history, just like the Russian and the French revolutions, seem to include a fundamental change in power of organizational structures that occur in a relatively short lapse of time. These revolutions were seeking freedom and democracy and attempted to protect the interests of the colonists. George Washington said once that “It is important to remember that several people contributed to the events surrounding the American Revolution. Many think that there were a minimum of 100 people who if they had not been born, we may still be subjects of the British Crown.
Many of these individuals are not seen in the same vein as people like George Washington or Thomas Jefferson, but those who would be the first to admit that the success of the “great experiment” was the result of thousands of people who laid their life for a specific purpose. Freedom.” 2 It is worthwhile mentioning that the American “Revolution” was more a quick evolution rather than a Revolution. This is in fact a highly debatable claim. If we examine, for example, the definition of evolution, we shall find that it is actually a process of development, growth as well as a crucial change that can occur in a given country.
By contrast, Revolution, by definition, presupposes an overthrow of a government and replacing this government by another effective one. So, while the American Revolution incorporates a serious change and a remarkable growth characterized by a quick evolution, the truth is that the main objective of the American Revolution is to become independent of the kingdom of Great Britain and its government. In this connexion, John Hancok argues that We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the
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