The taxation the brits did was not only to pay for their wars although that was a large part of it. It was to pay for a government that the colonists had no representation in. I have no idea what part of "taxation without representation" you don't get.... I have to assume that you just ignored the whole point of the revolution because it didn't fit with what you wanted.
It wasn't a tax to pay for THEIR wars, it was a tax to pay for OUR wars. On top of that, the british citizens themselves were paying for our wars at a tax rate about 3x what we paid.
The british citizens were paying for our war 3x more then we were paying for it.
The Taxation without Representation was just an idea to foment revolution. I said in another thread that the majority of the fighting was done by the married man aged 20-40. What I didn't say was that the majority of men did NOT fight, nor did they want to have a revolution. You had maybe 20% of the population (possibly less) held extremist views about revolting. Maybe 30% of the population held views that the british government was good. And the rest simply didn't care, or didn't think it was important enough to get involved in. They were happy where they were. So to revolt the extremists had to politicize issues to gain further support from the 50% who didn't care.
Like the Taxation without Representation. We were being taxed for such paltry sums, yet with some good politics the extremists made it look awful. And the Boston Massacre. A mob of people attack a tiny garrison of british troops, and 2 bostonians die when the brits defend themselves and fight back. With a little politicizing, the british were seen to have attacked the americans and killed hundreds with little provocation.
Wrong! Did you ever take a US History to Reconstruction Class? Slavery or the notion of abolishing slavery from the North's viewpoint didn't happen UNTIL 1863 with Lincoln's drafting of the Emancipation Proclamation.
No. The emancipation proclamation needed to be written after the first Union victory, so as to credit the document as having power. It just so happens that the Union got their tulips kicked up until 1863. It would have been laughable to do it before.
For example, let's say that Luxembourg suddenly makes the declaration that North and South Carolina belong to it. Everyone would laugh at them. But let's say that they kick some american bellybutton on the battlefield, THEN make the proclamation. Everyone would take it seriously.
Other then that, I pretty much agree with you, except for the resolution, which I have never heard of.