Answer:
The American, French, and Haitian Revolutions all achieved their initial political goals with
varying degrees of success, although victory sometimes meant great loss to the nations. Since the
Americans faced as less opposition and social inequality than their French and Haitian counterparts, the
patriots went on to defeat Great Britain and establish independence without overturning the colonial
social order. Despite terrible human, monetary, and social costs, the French and Haitian revolutions were
able to propel the idea of democracy and the ideal of equality far beyond the boundaries established by
the American Revolution.
Rebellions in the various parts of the world had differing political goals, but all seemed to be
inspired by the Enlightenment's radical philosophies. The American Declaration of Independence
emphasized the principle of popular sovereignty, which states that all governmental p
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