As I See It: Blood of tyrants

Most revolutions follow a long train of abuses. In April 1775, on Concord Bridge in Massachusetts, an organized militia of local citizens “Fired the shot heard round the World.” Taxation without representation had become oppressive and the colonials were refusing to pay. King George III sent his army to enforce his laws. The embattled farmers stood their ground against the most powerful military the world had ever known and the American Revolution was underway. A year later, the Declaration of Independence made it official. The king, of course, declared the revolutionaries traitors, and according to his laws they were. The revolutionaries considered themselves answering to a higher authority summarized in the Declaration. I won’t cite it here; every American is familiar. Right?