(Thousands descend on Downtown Chicago during the No Kings Day protest on Oct. 18, 2025.Ā Credit:Ā Colin Boyle/Block Club Chicago)
If the news is right with their āprotestā numbers are even close less than 2% of the entire Nation protested, but 22% of the Nation voted YOUR President into office. Let that sink into your thick heads.
Here is a little history lesson about how protests against the "KING" in the U.S. really works.
In 1763, at the conclusion of the French and Indian Wars the American Colonies foolishly believed that the āUnwritten British Constitutionā would protect their Rights and the British governmental system. A governmental system with a House of Commons, House of Lords and the monarch sharing power. This was an acceptable combination of democracy, oligarchy and tyranny. This would not happen.
On 7 October 1763 King George III issued the Royal Proclamation of 1763 following the Treaty of Paris (1763) ending the Seven Years War and transferring French held territories in North America to Great Britain. This proclamation stopped westward expansion past the Appalachian Mountains. The exclusion of exploration and expansion of Trans-Appalachia did not sit well with the Thirteen Colonies and would be the first of many nails in the coffin of British rule in North America. The prohibition on expansion would be ended in 1768 by the Treaty of Fort Stanwix but the damage was already done.
The British Government was buried under debt do to the French and Indian wars, because the bulk of that debt was created in the defense of the American Colonies the āCrownā thought it only right that the Colonies should pay much more in taxes for that protection. In 1764 the Sugar Act was imposed to generate monies for the Crown. The precursor to the Sugar Tax was the Molasses Act of 1733, the act was never fully ātaxedā because of smuggling, bribery or intimidation of customs officials effectively voiding the law.
The Colonies were increasingly upset with increased British control, up to that point they felt they were equal partners in ruling. This started an ever increasing rift between British loyalists and the more patriotic separatists looking for more autonomy.
In 1765, the start of the American Revolution, the Stamp Act or Duties in American Colonies Act 1765 was imposed on the American Colonies. The Stamp Act required most printed materials to be printed on paper from London, embossed with a revenue stamp. The Stamp Act was greatly unpopular in the Colonies, as it was seen as a violation of their rights as Englishmen to not be taxed without their consent and representation in parliament. Because of this view the slogan "No taxation without representation" was born.
In direct response to this belief from 7 October 1765 though 25 October 1765 the Stamp Act Congress or Continental Congress of 1765 was held in New York City in the Province of New York. This meeting was to solidify a strategies against the newly imposed taxes against the colonies. On 19 October 1765 the Declaration of Rights and Grievances was passed. Among many things it stated only representatives chosen by the colonists could levy taxes. Because the British Parliament did not have such representatives in the colonies it could not levy taxes on them. On 25 October 1765 the formal petitions were signed and transmission of documents were made to England.
In 1765 the British enacted the first Quartering Act, an extension of the 1689 Mutiny Act. The previous Quartering Act had expired on 2 January 1864 and British officers found it harder and harder to collect pay for quartering and provisions of regular troops. Prior to the French and Indian Wars, the colonies were not asked to support a standing army and did not want to do it further after the wars. In 1766 the New York Provincial Assembly would not supply billeting for the British troops. This meant the 1500 troops were forced to stay on their ships. The Province of New York's governor and legislature were suspended by parliament because of this in 1767 and 1769, each time New York paid. This act expired on 24 March 1767.
In 1766 the Declaratory Act or American Colonies Act 1766 was passed by the British Parliament as was the repeal of the Stamp Act and the amendment of the Sugar Act. This was all due to the boycotts in the America were cutting deep into British trade. The Declaratory Act was a way for the Crown to save face in repealing the Stamp Act. The boycotts only worked because the British Empire was still in deep debt and could no longer afford the lack of trade dollars. The British Parliament would not try to directly tax the colonies or any of itās overseas territories until 1778, weāll get to that in a few years.
In 1767 the Townsend Act(S) were put in place. The Townsend Acts are a series of taxes named after Charles Townshend, the Chancellor of the Exchequer. The Townsend Acts consisted of The Suspending Act 5 June 1767, The Revenue Act 26 June 1767, The Commissioners of Customs Act 29 June 1767, The Indemnity Act 1767 2 July 1767, The New York Restraining Act 1767 2 July 1767, The Vice Admiralty Court Act 1768 passed on 8 March 1768. The purpose of all these acts were to generate tax money for the Crown. The Commissioners of Customs Act would lead directly to the Boston Massacre on 5 March 1770.
On 10 May 1773 the Tea Act of 1773 was slapped on the American Colonies. This act had many reasons and effects on the colonies, being directly coupled with the Townsend Acts it levied heavy taxes on the colonies, taxes they were no longer willing to shoulder. This was in part because the act allowed the East India Company to sell Chines tea to the colonies without taxes while imposing all of the associated Townsend Act taxes.
On 16 December 1773 the American Colonies protests would step it up substantially. Up to that point the protests and skirmishes had been small and loosely organized. The Sons of Liberty would change all of that with the Boston Tea Party. The Sons of Liberty saw both the Townsend Act and Tea Act because they saw them as a violation of their Rights as Englishmen. All the colonies wanted was to be treats like the Englishmen they saw themselves as.
On 25 December 1773 the less well known Philadelphia Tea Party would force the British tea ship Polly to leave without dropping the tea intended for the firm of James and Drinker. On 27 December, on the State House Yard, 8000 Philadelphians gathered to discuss the situation. At that point, this was the largest gathering in the American Colonies. Many resolutions were past the first one being āNo tea shall not be landedā.
As a direct consequence the Intolerable Acts/Insufferable Acts or Coercive Acts were passed. The 5 acts were:
31 March 1774 the Boston Port act that formed a blockade of Boston harbor until āRestitutionā was made to the Crown and the East India Company.
20 May 1774 the Administration of Justice Act 1774. Often called the Murder Act allowed the appointed governor the power to set aside any acquisitions made against British officers if the governor didnāt thing said officer could get a fair trial. The Colonies felt this gave British officers the ability to kill colonist without consequences.
21 May 1774 the Massachusetts Government Act rescinded the 1691 charter of the Province of Massachusetts Bay and gave almost total power to the Royally appointed governor. This act would be a hard shove in the direction of the 1775 Revolution.
In 1774 the second of the Quartering Act was placed on all the colonies. This gave the governor the abilities to quarter troops in any āunoccupiedā building. Buildings were often rendered āunoccupiedā by forcing the occupants out into the streets.
Lastly, but less related was the 22 June 1774 Quebec Act. The Quebec Act massively expanded the territory of Quebec by adding much of what is now southern Ontario, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin, and parts of Minnesota. It removed any mention of the Protestant faith from the Oath leaning into the Catholic faith of Quebec, it also voided all claims of the Ohio Company. Ā
For 12 years the American Colonies protested the King of England and his rule.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
ā Live Streamingā Interactive Chatā Private Showsā HD Qualityā Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
On this day, December 16, 1773, the Boston Tea Party took place, a significant event in American history. It was a political protest by the American colonists against British taxation without representation. The Tea Act of 1773 allowed the British East India Company to sell tea directly to the colonies. This undercutting of local merchants and enforcing a tax on tea was the catalyst for this protest.
On the night of the incident, a group of colonists, known as the Sons of Liberty, dressed as Mohawk Indians to conceal their identities and boarded three British ships anchored in Boston Harbor. They threw 342 chests of tea, worth around the equivalent of one million dollars today, overboard into the harbor.
Samuel Adams primarily led the Boston Tea Party, which was organized by John Hancock. However, the identities of many of the participants remain a mystery. Notably, Francis Akeley is the only individual known to have been arrested and imprisoned for his role in the event.Ā
The images come from:
Dorothy Q: Together with A Ballad of theĀ Boston Tea PartyĀ & Grandmother's Story of Bunker Hill Battle by Oliver Wendell Holmes with illustrations by Howard Pyle, published in Boston by Ā Houghton, Mifflin and Company in 1893.
1810 - Ludwig van Beethoven composes famous pieceĀ āFur Eliseā (pictured)
1865 - Steamboat SS Sultana explodes on the Mississippi River killing up to 1800, greatest maritime disaster in US history - most were paroled Union POWs on their way home
1940 - Himmler orders establishment of Auschwitz Concentration Camp
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
ā Live Streamingā Interactive Chatā Private Showsā HD Qualityā Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Da da da dat da dat da da da ya da da da dat dat da ya da! Da da da dat da dat da da da da da ya da, da da dat dat da ya ā¦You say our love is draining and you canāt go on. Youāll be the one complaining when I am gone⦠And no donāt change the subject, cuz youāre my favorite subject, my sweet, submissive subject, my loyal, royal subject, forever and ever and ever and ever and ever⦠Youāll be back, like before, I will fight the fight and win the war
Lin-Manuel Miranda
The American colonists were British subjects but did not receive (in their interpretation) the rights and privileges that go along with being a British subject. This was, of course, their main grievance which started the war.
He did win the French and Indian or Seven Years War (treaty signed in 1763) not many years before the revolution took off. This war did protect the American colonists, however, it also angered them because afterwards they were not able to live on the land west of the line determined in the Proclamation of 1763 and many of the tax laws which the colonists disliked were a way of making up the revenue spent on this war (for example: Stamp Act, Sugar Act, Tea Act, etc.).
Sources: the following sources were used - the collected letters/writings of Alexander Hamilton, Lin-Manuel Mirandaās Hamilton the Revolution, Ron Chernowās biography of Hamilton, The Intimate Life of Alexander Hamilton by Allan McLane Hamilton, Hamilton by Richard Syllia, and Charles Ceramiās book called Young Patriots.
Follow us at @an-american-experiment where we are historically analyzing the lyrics of Hamilton with a new post every day!
If only Theodora DuBois had used the date of May 10th in her murder mystery,Ā Death Comes to Tea. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1940. [Or even December 16th.] History buffs know that the Tea Act passed the House of Lords on May 10, 1773... which led to the Boston Tea Party on December 16th of that same year.
For #WhodunitWednesday, weāre commemorating that fateful bill - and wishing we could find the china pattern displayed on the dust jacket: