Over the holiday weekend, I came across  this great article by Neil Buchanan via the  Tax Professor discussing  the connections between Independence Day and taxation. Check out a clip  from their post below.
I thought I would take another look at  our oft-mentioned and seldom-read Declaration of Independence to see  what it has to say about taxes and other issues of import. Herewith,  a quick (and admittedly incomplete) summary of the contents:
 
Obviously, the most important issue addressed  in the Declaration was the ongoing violence in the colonies. Among its  more memorable descriptions of conditions at the time, the Declaration  reminded the world that King George III "has plundered our seas,  ravaged our coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our  people." The founding fathers were understandably focused primarily  on matters of life and death.
Beyond those immediate concerns, though,  the bulk of the Declaration expresses, in essence, a thirst for politics.  That is, the major non-war-related complaint is that there is no locally  elected legislature passing laws for the colonies. Our founders were  willing to lay their lives on the line, in other words, to create legislatures.
 
For those of us who are law professors  and lawyers, it is interesting that the Declaration also seems to express  (or at least imply) a desire for lawsuits and defense lawyers. The king  "has obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his  assent to laws for establishing Judiciary powers" and "depriv[ed]  us, in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury." (Current  readers are likely to split into two camps in their reactions to those  statements, with some saying "If they only knew what they were  getting us into," and others saying, "Yes, lawyers are an  essential ingredient of a stable nation.")
The Declaration also notes that the king  had prevented colonists from trading with foreign nations, which was  an especially sore point for our resource-rich and young nation. (There  is also, I should say, a rarely-quoted—and inflammatory—comment  about the American Indians, reminding us that even the Founding Fathers  made controversial statements.)
