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Magnetic Stickers - Personal Custom Made
CHEAP MAGNETIC VEHICLE SIGNS -- $16.95 SPECIAL OFFER Quantity 2, 12" x 18", Your Personal Design. Bumper Sticker Magnets 20% Bonus Discount. Order at least 500 Bumper Stickers, and get a 20% discount on Magnet Bumper Stickers, same style, same time. Make your own bumper sticker. The 20% discount is given to the first 500 magnets, and a 10% discount is provided on the additional quantities beyond 500. Customize Made Bumper Stickers. New cheap Bumper Sticker political election custom advertising concepts. Your personal design. Bumper Stickers Special Prices
Magnetic Sticker MakerOne of the most common uses of a magnetic sticker is political affiliation. Bumper stickers are relatively inexpensive to produce, so candidates often pass them out as campaign promotions. Politically active drivers may feel a sense of connection with a favored candidate once they display these bumper stickers prominently. Their vehicles become traveling placards, getting the politician's name circulating among potential voters. Some political bumper stickers may address a specific issue instead of a general political party. Expressing an opinion on a controversial topic may be easier through the judicious use of a political bumper sticker.The Stamp Act Stamp Act, 1765, revenue law passed by the British Parliament during the ministry of George Grenville. The first direct tax to be levied on the American colonies, it required that all newspapers, pamphlets, legal documents, commercial bills, advertisements, and other papers issued in the colonies bear a stamp. The revenue obtained from the sale of stamps was designated for colonial defense; while the means of raising revenue was novel, the application of such revenue to defense continued existing British policy. The act was vehemently denounced in the colonies by those it most affected: businessmen, merchants, journalists, lawyers, and other powerful persons. Among these were Samuel Adams, Christopher Gadsden, Patrick Henry, John Dickinson, John Lamb, Joseph Warren, and Paul Revere. Associations known as the Sons of Liberty were formed to organize opposition to the Stamp Act. Merchants boycotted English goods; stamp distributors were forced to resign and stamps were destroyed; and the Massachusetts legislature, at the suggestion of James Otis, issued a call for a general congress to find means of resisting the law. The Stamp Act Congress,. which met in Oct., 1765, in New York City, included delegates from New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Delaware, South Carolina, Maryland, and Connecticut. The congress adopted the Declaration of Rights and Grievances; it declared that freeborn Englishmen could not be taxed without their consent, and, since the colonists were not represented in Parliament, any tax imposed on them without the consent of their colonial legislatures was unconstitutional. Faced with a loss of trade, Parliament repealed the Stamp Act in 1766. Endnotes at www.AmericanMinute.com | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||