Originally posted by lord of the mark
Pawned, my friend, pwned you are.
"John Locke (August 29, 1632 – October 28, 1704)"
John Locke DIED 72 years before the Declaration was written. They had long since become the basis of whiggish political thought, and were generally accepted in the colonies - though of course anti-whig elements in Britain didnt accept them, and of course the continental monarchies didnt.
Jefferson didnt put them in cause they were novel but cause they werent, and they were the basis of a logical proof of the right to revolt. Notice he spends very little time defending his assertion of rights - he spends most of the document defending the assertion that the king HAD violated those rights, and in ways serious enough to justify revolution. That was what was at issue.
Pawned, my friend, pwned you are.
"John Locke (August 29, 1632 – October 28, 1704)"
John Locke DIED 72 years before the Declaration was written. They had long since become the basis of whiggish political thought, and were generally accepted in the colonies - though of course anti-whig elements in Britain didnt accept them, and of course the continental monarchies didnt.
Jefferson didnt put them in cause they were novel but cause they werent, and they were the basis of a logical proof of the right to revolt. Notice he spends very little time defending his assertion of rights - he spends most of the document defending the assertion that the king HAD violated those rights, and in ways serious enough to justify revolution. That was what was at issue.
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Yes, he said the King has violated these novel rights. Articulated maybe a 100 years ago, if not less. A belief in rights that had not been adopted by any European country.
It's like saying a 'right to health care' isn't novel in the US because it is generally accepted by those on the non-moderate left.
How could the right not apply to them at the time?
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