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Why did the pamphlet Common Sense have such a powerful impact on the American colonists?

A. It was clearly written with a direct message that appealed to their pride and hope for the future.
B. It upheld the morality and authority of the British king and encouraged people to do their duty.
C. It supported independence but generated much more angst as it included an end to slavery.
D. It encouraged loyalty but listed reasons that would justify the rebellion that eventually happened.

Respuesta :

Answer:

The correct answer is option A "It was clearly written with a direct message that appealed to their pride and hope for the future."

Explanation:

Initially distributed secretly, "Common Sense" supported autonomy for the American states from England and is viewed as one of the most compelling leaflets in American history. Credited with joining normal residents and political pioneers behind the possibility of freedom, "Presence of mind" assumed a momentous function in changing a pilgrim quarrel into the American Revolution.

At the time Paine stated "Common Sense" most settlers believed themselves to be distressed Britons. Paine generally changed the tenor of pilgrims' contention with the crown when he composed the accompanying: "Europe, and not Britain, is the parent nation of America. This new world hath been the refuge for the oppressed admirers of common and strict freedom from all aspects of Europe. Here they have fled, not from the delicate grasps of the mother, but rather from the mercilessness of the beast; and it is so far valid for Britain, that a similar oppression which drove the principal migrants from home, seeks after their relatives still."