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78:, Taxation no Tyranny contained Johnson's whole political theory that "legal rights are emanations, which, whether equitably or not, may be legally recalled." This is in stark contrast with the citizens of the Colonies who believed that the Rights of Englishmen were immutable. Historian A. J. Beitzinger drew parallels between Johnson's phrase of sovereignty and gradations with Royal Governor
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noted of the essay that the "doctrine of sovereignty almost by itself compelled the imperial debate to be conducted in the most theoretical terms of political science." Johnson believed that "there must, in every society, be some power or other from which there is no appeal". As noted by Gordon
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considered
Johnson's tract "controversial" given its expressly laid down argument that "in sovereignty, there are no gradations. That there may be limited royalty; there may be limited consulship; but there can be no limited government.", which seemed to chide American malcontents.
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wrote that "Virginians may have had a special appreciation of the freedom so dear to republicans, because they saw every day what life without it would be like." Some historians have juxtaposed
Johnson's phrase with
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Wood, this meant that for
Johnson, "Such a sovereignty needed no representational justification" whereas "those zealots of anarchy" (in the 13 colonies) were promoting an effrontery that "no one had ever had".
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Still, other scholars and historians have noted
Johnson's essay for its phrase "How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of negroes?" Yale's Sterling professor of History
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Humanitarian Intervention - Ethical, Legal and Political Dilemmas
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The Winter Soldiers - The Battles for Trenton and Princeton
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Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress
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Miscellaneous Observations on the Tragedy of Macbeth
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