USA Travel and History on Independence Day

USA, Travel and History on Independence Day

Movements are forecast to reach unprecedented heights nationally as major chain stores ramp up shopping.

According to the American Automobile Association (AAA), the 50.7 million citizens relocating will exceed last year’s numbers by more than 2.1 million and the peak reached in 2019 by nearly 1.8 million.

At a meeting of the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776 in the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, delegates from the 13 British colonies—which later became the United States—passed the Declaration of Independence.

However, independence (finally won in 1783 after eight years of war) did not imply social equality, which was impossible under the capitalist regime, and it would not, according to historians, even consecrate equality before the law of common law.

They argue that slavery, which fueled the increasing cultivation of tobacco and cotton, persisted and gained traction as a social relationship and was one of the great foundations of North American economic expansion.

According to the late historian Howard Zinn, the country was not born free, but slave and free, servant and master, tenant and landowner, poor and rich, and on the basis of a thriving domestic market and a strong policy of expansion, it would gradually emerge Become a colony and transform into an imperialist superpower.

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