BlkbrryTheGreat wrote:By all means then, please, tell me what force in law the Declaration actually has. Did it establish the government of the US? No, the Articles of Confederation did that.
The Articles of Confederation were the first Constitution of the United States. The Second Continental Congress became the first Government of the United States when the Declaration of Independence was issue.
The Continental Congress was never the government of the United States. It was a forum where the thirteen colonies could coordinate their efforts. Until the Articles of Confederation were established, the United States was a military alliance and curency union of thirteen sovereign nations, not a single confederacy. You might consider it a sort of provisional government during the war years, and it did assume some sovereign powers by default, but the United States as a nation with a government didn't exist until 1781.
Did it establish the formal and legal independence of the US?
Not in the eyes of the British, but in the eyes of America it certainly did.
What established independence in American eyes was the actual decision on the part of Congress to sever ties with Britian (a decision the individual colonies had to make before their delegates could do anything). The Declaration was just that: a declaration of the fact and the reasons behind it. If they'd just walked out of Independence Hall and pronounced, "We took a vote and we decided we're independent now", it would have had the exact same effect.
All the Declaration did was inform George III that the colonies no longer considered themselves to be governed from London
And give them the legal authority of an actual government within the US.
It gave them nothing of the sort. The vote in Congress did that--and that vote was only possible because the individual colonies gave their delegates permission to do so.
I could send a letter to Congress declaring my house is an independent nation, and it would have precisely the same legal force as the Declaration.
Thats a bullshit arguement through extreme, the "scale" of secession is indeed an issue. (As is the motive.) While I'm not sure, at this point, what the actual threshold is, its safe to say that secession movements that occupy the better part of a Continent meet the threshold, both the US and CSA meet it.
Prove the Declaration, by virtue of having been issued by a larger political entitiy than mine, is more valid as a legal document by default. You've completely failed to demonstrate the Declaration of Independence has or had any force in law. It might have more MORAL legitimacy than my letter, but this whole argument is over the legality of succession, and legally, the Declaration and my declaration are equal.
After the Declaration was issued America was Independent. If they were not Independent then the British would not have had to attempt to military conquer to "restore" it to the Empire, the Treaty of Paris was nothing more then the British finally acknowledging the reality that was staring them in the face.
In the eyes of the colonies, yes they were--in fact, they were independent several days BEFORE the Declaration was written, thanks to the the unanimous vote in favor of independence on 1 July. And if you're going to use the fact that the British army was running around the continent trying to crush the rebellion and restore royal authority as proof of America's independence, then the United States had been independent a year before the Declaration was written, so that hardly helps your argument.
The Treaty of Paris was the formal, de jure establishment of the United States as a sovereign nation. It was de facto independence existed in parts of the colonies (primarily New England) much earlier. The reality of independence was hardly "staring the British in the face": had the French fleet not arrived in time at Yorktown, Cornwalis may well have escaped Virginia, a catastrophe that could well have pushed American war exhaustion over the edge and sent the two sides to the bargaining table. Losing an entire army sapped Britian's will to fight any longer (they had more important things on the table than chasing rebels around North America anyway--the war with France and Spain in the Carribbean was over much more important real estate), but the British were in no way militarily unable to continue the conflict.