They felt broken, and powerless.
No they loved slavery it was important to the slave owners
It was one of the Confederate States - a slave state - and they felt slavery was okay.
Probably not all that different to how I feel now. I consider myself a slave; I always have done. I am in a consentual Master/slave relationship (a totally different thing to legal slavery).
Captain Canot was a slave trader and profited from the slave trade, so he was likely supportive of slavery as a means to further his own interests and economic gain.
They had no idea of what they were doing. They believed that whites were just superior overall to the blacks.
Frederick Douglas was anti-slavery, because he was a slave until he escaped to freedom and then spoke to people about how wrong it was.
Yes, a slave state permits slavery.
Edward Clay was an abolitionist who spoke out against slavery. He believed that slavery was morally wrong and detrimental to society. Clay advocated for the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade.
The southern lawmakers felt that slavery was a profitable business and did not want it to end and did not want to lose slave territory.
Nothing. They are the same thing. A slave is the person. Slavery is the condition.
There are many different answers to this question due to all of the different opinions of this topic. I feel that the legacy of slavery is hate. For example, in the time of slavery, lynching was a very popular way of executing a runaway slave. Today, nooses have been found on trees and on peoples doors. This is why I feel that hate is the legacy of slavery.
The singular form of "slavery" is "slave."