The Rhetorical Analysis Of Jefferson's Declaration Of Independence

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As Americans isn’t it our duty to know why we declared war against Great Britain? Shouldn’t we know the standards America has supposedly been founded on? Of course. Jefferson’s straightforward declaration of King George the III as a tyrant is one way in which readers are able to see the cruelty Americans withstood under his tyranny and also the patience they maintained up until the point at which this work was written. While Americans ought to know the standards their country was founded upon, it is rather difficult when these standards and beliefs are misconstrued throughout a work declaring the country’s independency. While Jefferson is certainly able to make a very strong argument for the independence of America through his use of rhetorical strategies as well as his respectful declaration of colonial rights, he clearly fails to present a true definition of the equality of men, as determined by the Creator, in the Declaration of Independence. Before being able to fully understand what it is …show more content…

This fact and Jefferson’s usage of strong rhetorical strategies are what fashion the Declaration of Independence into such a strong work. Since the Declaration of Independence’s signing on July 4th, 1776 (Jacobus, 262) America has made much progress out from under the thumb of the King. However, for a reader, who has realized Jefferson’s failure to truly declare all men independent, his argument has lost much of its effect. A country founded on the belief that God, the Creator, has endowed all men certain rights that cannot be taken away, ought to believe that all men truly are equal and this belief ought to be clearly represented in the country’s Declaration of Independence. If this is not the honest belief of the country then it ought not to be present in such a revered piece of

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