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Abolitionists wanted to end Slavery
Just the opposite, abolitionists violently opposed slavery.
abolitionists
there where e around 568 states in India before independence.....
Nathuram Godse was the first person who was hanged after independence of India.
I don't know I am also wondering why and I know I am not answering your question......... >:p
abolitionists argued that slavery was morally wrong
abolitionists argued that slavery was morally wrong
abolitionists argued that slavery was morally wrong
Abolitionists believed that slavery was morally wrong and campaigned for its immediate abolition. They argued that all people, regardless of race, should be free and have equal rights. Abolitionists played a key role in the movement to end slavery in the United States.
Patriots
Abolitionists used religion to justify their cause by emphasizing Christian values such as compassion, equality, and dignity for all individuals, regardless of race. They argued that slavery was incompatible with these beliefs and that it went against the teachings of love and justice in the Bible. Many abolitionists were motivated by their faith to fight against slavery and believed it was their moral duty to work towards its abolition.
The authors of the Declaration of Independence argued against taxation without representation and for religious freedom.
common sense
Abolitionists such as William Wilberforce, Thomas Clarkson, and Olaudah Equiano argued against the continuation of the slave trade. They used moral, ethical, and religious arguments to push for the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade.
The group of US citizens named the antislavery abolitionists wanted to end slavery in the United States. This group of great influence believed that slavery was wrong and contradicted the Declaration of Independence.
john Locke argued that individuals had divinely granted rights as well as many others in history. These rights are included in the Unites State's Declaration of Independence as well The United Nation's Universal Declaration of Human Rights.