Common Sense: Appendix

"What is strangely astonishing, perfect Independence contending for dependence."
At the time of the Revolution, America was held together by a weak Continental Congress with little authority. You can picture Thomas Paine reflecting on how surreal it was to live in a completely free society, without law, or government. Yet this was testimony to the fact that man can live in a society with unbridled freedom. Why was this a surreal opportunity? "The instance is without precedent; the case never existed before ... We have every opportunity and every encouragement before us, to form the noblest purest constitution on the face of the earth." Because of the sacrifice of the men and women who endured and those who died in the American Revolution we have a system more noble than any ever created on earth.
"We have it in our power to begin the world over again."
This section contains many great quotable passages. Here is another one: "We neither mean to set up nor to put down, neither to make nor to unmake, but to have nothing to do with them." Who/What is the "them" that we want nothing to do with in our current situation?

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