Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,642
(bold mine)These highlights show the reasons which they fought for, which are directly related to trade, wealth, and self-regulation, three things the colonies were quite used to, until the Brittish government changed its mind, post French and Indian War.
You're right. Economics was a major part of the American revolution. But as you also correctly point out, it was something the colonies had and which they were being deprived of which they fought for. It's much more difficult for the general population to fight for something it has never had in the first place. Which still leaves the problem of tyranny and oppression in third-world countries unsolved by the example of the American revolution: they're stuck in positions where poor governance is preventing such economic development, and without that development, they cannot topple oppressive regimes from within. It becomes a perverse chicken-and-egg problem. The only realistic hope to escape this in many places is external intervention, but to succeed, that generally has to include both reform of economics AND government. And many oppressive governments simply will not yield to any pressure to reform short of direct force, so economic-only "Marshall Plans" are doomed from the start. The Marshall Plan only worked in the context of military occupation.