Yes. Because back then slaves werent treated like human beings.
slaves had to work 24/7 and rarely got anything to eat. they were mostley chained up shoulder to shoulder. if anyone got sick they would thorw up on the ground or if anyone dies they just fall on the ground and still be chained up. if a slave tried escaping they would be captured and killed. Drew Adams (emo boyy) ;)
No Alabama does not have slaves. Slavery is illegal in every state of America. YES. WE, ALABAMIANS, ARE BACKWARDS, AND THEREFORE STILL HAVE SLAVES. not.
They either got well as they worked, or they died.
John Jay owned several slaves, even though he supported the anti-slavery movement. Ok, wtf! answer, if he supported the anti slaves, why the hell would he own slaves? Is he sick in the head?
William still helped upto 60 slaves escape to Canada a month
No, not at all. Slaves were expected to work whether they were healthy or sick.
sadly, yes. it was thought that it was better to get as much work out of the slave before it died. there was no need seen to treat a sick slave when one could be bought or a child would soon be ready to work
Sabotaging equipment or tools, pretending to be sick or injured, or deliberately working slowly are examples of passive resistance that slaves used to disrupt the system of slavery without directly confronting their oppressors.
Pretending to be sick to avoid work.
If the slaves were sick, they would usually be thrown offboard and left to swim. This is because no-one would want to buy the sick slaves.
There are still slaves today.
It is a compound sentence.
an example of passive resistance used by slaves is feigning illness or working slowly in the fields to resist their oppressors without outright defiance.
Slaves owners could use brutal force by beating their slaves into submission or they would simply be kind to their slaves while still enforcing a good work ethic.
from when the slaves rebelled and got tired of your work you all fat sick me dont know me dummy you arr vas legas
what are u sick or something
In the civil war slaves were still slaves but still, they were with the enemy and were as such treated as the enemy.