It’s been long enough! Time for some history!
When I was in grad school one of my course of research was American history, 1700-1825, there was so much history in those years that I found it fascinating and I like to pass on some of the early history that most Americans have probably never learned or even heard of in their past history lessons.
In those years there was war, revolution, a Constitution, birth and growing pains of a new nation and another war and lots of problems with the birth of a new nation.
Most Americans have heard, at least a little, of the UK’s Stamp Act, the Tea Party, etc…..major events that helped form the American psyche….but what about a Molasses Act?
The year is 1743 ten years after UK Parliament passed the Molasses Act if 1733….and Americans were pissed.
In the humid haze of July, 1743, Boston’s cobblestone streets erupted in a sticky revolt—not over tea or stamps, but molasses. The Sugar Riots, sparked by Britain’s Molasses Act of 1733, were no mere tantrum over a tax; they were a visceral cry against imperial meddling in a fledgling economy. This obscure upheaval, buried beneath the grandeur of 1776, offers a lens into the primal forces that forged American liberty: free markets, local grit, and a fierce aversion to distant overreach. For conservatives in 2025, it’s a clarion call to guard those same principles against modern parallels–bloated bureaucracies and economic straitjackets–while acknowledging the balance required to avoid chaos. The Sugar Riots are more than a tale of colonial unrest; they’re a mirror for our times.The Molasses Act was a textbook blunder of central planning. Parliament, bowing to British sugar barons in the Caribbean, slapped a six-pence-per-gallon duty on molasses from French and Dutch colonies, aiming to choke New England’s rum trade and prop up its own. The math didn’t add up. French molasses, at a shilling a gallon, fueled Boston’s distilleries with ruthless efficiency; British alternatives, twice as costly, couldn’t compete. Rum wasn’t a luxury–it was the grease of the Triangle Trade, turning molasses into liquor, liquor into enslaved labor, and labor back into profit. By 1743, New England churned out nearly a million gallons yearly, a lifeline for merchants, sailors, and dockhands alike. The tax didn’t just hike prices–it threatened to snap an economic spine.Britain’s folly wasn’t the levy itself but its arrogance: a distant elite, blind to local realities, imposing rules that defied practicality. Smuggling became Boston’s defiant workaround, a black market so woven into daily life that customs officers winked for a cut. When war loomed in 1744, London tightened the screws–not to enforce the law, but to fund its coffers. The result? A summer of shattered windows, torched effigies, and molasses-soaked protests. The riots weren’t elegant–no Jeffersonian prose here–just raw, rum-fueled rage from a people who saw their livelihoods as sacred. Conservatives can nod at this: a government overstepping its lane, trampling free enterprise, breeds rebellion as surely as night follows day.Yet the story isn’t a simple hymn to deregulation. The mob of 1743–sailors, apprentices, laborers–wasn’t chanting for Locke or Smith; they were breaking things because they were broke. Their anger, while justified, teetered on anarchy, a reminder that unchecked populism can curdled into lawlessness. Governor William Shirley, scrambling to quell the chaos, faced a militia too sympathetic to crack skulls and a Crown too distracted to send help. Order won, barely, through pragmatism—quiet deals to ease off, not bayonets. Balance mattered then, as it does now: liberty thrives with guardrails, not in a vacuum.Fast-forward to 2025, and the Sugar Riots whisper warnings. Conservatives rightly cheer markets as engines of freedom, but today’s economic landscape echoes 1743’s tensions. Replace molasses with gig-worker taxes or green-energy mandates–policies pushed by a coastal elite, often disconnected from the heartland’s pulse. A trucker in Tulsa or a coder in Boise doesn’t need Washington’s thumb on their scale, just as Boston’s distillers didn’t need London’s. The Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act, with its labyrinth of subsidies and levies, smells like a modern Molasses Act: well-intentioned on paper, suffocating in practice. Small businesses, the rum-runners of our day, dodge red tape with the same ingenuity–or resentment–as their colonial kin.
It sometimes seems as if Trump is trying to rekindle some of that 1743 spirit by constantly criticising the EU and the UK as an excuse for imposing tariffs on almost every country, including islands only inhabited by penguins or polar bears. Most of his fans have yet to realise that it is them who will be paying the price increases, not the countries exporting the goods they want to buy. Hopefully, they might wake up to that soon, but I doubt it. I think they will just keep blaming the other countries, because that is easier than trying to learn about trade, free market economies, and tariffs.
Best wishes, Pete.
BS is always easier than knowledge…..we Americans love the BS chuq
You don’t need to look towards the UK, we had our own home grown problems regarding our own government and it’s own fiascos, like the Whiskey Rebellion. Riots, murders, false imprisonments, arrests without warrants or proper legal authority, the government’s abuse of its authority, open rebellion, using US troops against citizens… All because of an overreaching tax that favored the wealthy at the expense of the poor and fostered waves of corruption. It was not the newly founded Unites States’ finest moment.
Back in those days the US Army was about 100 men….ergo the need for the 2nd. chuq