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
You call them a slave driver or a slave's master.
The slave was considering resistance toward her master's hard work by faking she was sick.
Blacks of course...
People that would buy a slave would buy them because they needed work to be done. They were called, "slave owners". Slavery is now illegal. The Civil War fought against slavery.
Often if a slave refused to obey every whim of their masters they were beaten, starved, whipped, and punished severely through brute force.
No, slave owners in Louisiana were not able to legally work a slave forever. Slavery was officially abolished in the United States with the passage of the 13th Amendment in 1865, which made involuntary servitude illegal. Prior to this, there were laws and regulations governing the treatment and duration of enslavement, but slavery itself was not a permanent institution.
because the north was more reliant on machine work than slave labor because the north was more industrial than it was agricultural
It is not legal to work in this country if you do not have a green card and you are an illegal.
Probably not. The bulk of the labour force were peasants conscripted when the Nile was in flood and no work possible in the fields.
A slave factory is were slaves work
Most Jewish women, all children, elderly people, sick people, and disabled people would be killed immediately on arrival in the gas chambers and cremated. Men, and a few women, would be used as slave labor, to dispose of the corpses. When the slave labor became too sick and disabled to work, they were gassed, and replaced by other men. Women who were saved, were used in other ways by the camp, as slave labor.