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Slavery In America Essay

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The states in which slavery is still commonplace are well-known for their wealth, with much of this due to the friendly policies of the federal government towards the South. That said, if slavery were all of a sudden abolished, as many in the North argue, the nation’s economy as a whole would suffer greatly, especially with regard to exports, of which those from the South compose nine-tenths. Furthermore, those who believe that slaves in the South lead worse lives than laborers in the North are mistaken to the point of being disingenuous. The laborer in the North has to deal with poverty and anxiety to a much larger extent than that of the slave. Another common myth that abolitionists insist on is that the lack of education oppresses the slave. …show more content…

While in the South we agree that the importation of slaves from Africa was wrong, we also understand that the slaves in America lead better lives than those of the blacks in Africa. This also relates to the false idea that the black slave was “created free”. In truth, according to the Bible, the African was made to be subservient. The question we really must be asking ourselves is that when the Founding Fathers declared, “All men are created equal”, did they mean the black slave? The answer to that question is an emphatic no, and here is why. Slavery has existed since before Christ, and when Christianity was beginning to spread in Asia, slavery was in perhaps its harshest form. Slavery at that time and now in ours, like the relationship between a father and son, is a covenant, and breaking these covenants would eventually destroy the society that we know today. To a great extent, slavery has made politicians less corrupt, and made people more able to focus on matters of political importance, as slave owners have less work to do than those in the

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