answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

While John Brown's passion and commitment to ending slavery are commendable, his use of violence can be seen as morally questionable. While some argue that violence was necessary to provoke change, others believe that non-violent methods could have been more effective in achieving the same goal. Overall, Brown's actions remain a point of controversy in the discussion of the abolitionist movement.

User Avatar

AnswerBot

3w ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: John Brown was right to use violence to protest slavery explain?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

John brown was right to use violence to protest slavery?

NO BITCHESS nope


John brown was right to use violence to protest slavery.?

NO BITCHESS nope


Who used violence to try to end slavery?

John Brown


Who believed that only violence could end slavery?

john brown


Which person turned to violence to fight slavery?

You are probably thinking of John Brown.


Why john brown's raid failed to unite forces that oppose slavery?

Northerners and Southerners were not ready to resort to violence to abolish slavery


Why did john brown's raid fail to unite forces that opposed slavery?

Northerners and Southerners were not ready to resort to violence to abolish slavery


What did the opponents of slavery say about John Brown?

Some opponents of slavery praised John Brown's life and actions including his raid on Harpers Ferry. Other opponents of slavery were strongly against violence and for this reason did not approve of John Brown's actions.


What did John Brown believe would end slavery?

by using violence and killing most of the white men


What statement best explains why john brown failed to unite forces that opposed slavery?

Northerners and Southerners were not ready to resort to violence to abolish slavery


That compromise of 1850 could have stopped the violence over slavery?

There wasn't much violence about slavery in 1850, only a lot of verbal disagreement. The 1850 Compromise heightened the tension, through the unpopularity of the Fugitive Slave Act, and the publication of 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' as an angry protest against it. Bloodshed followed from the next compromise, the Kansas-Nebraska Act, and tensions rose further with the Dred Scott verdict (declaring slavery legal in every state of the Union), the Lincoln-Douglas debates, and the John Brown rebellion. By then, war was on its way.


What did John Brown and Frederick Douglas have in common?

John Brown and Frederick Douglas were both abolitionists. Frederick wanted to ended slavery peacefully while John Brown was using violence to free slaves.