nothing they hate them
Yes
becase he freeed the slaves I belive
It is not known exactly why Abraham Lincoln so opposed slavery. His own humble beginnings may have been a contributing factor, and while he was not openly religious, Lincoln had very strong convictions in God.
From what we know about him he hated war but felt that the war he fought was a necessary evil.
If a person is a slave holder then that person has no respect for any of the basic tenets that we hold dear in freedom lovingsociety's add to this that a society that depends o slavery is unable to compete with a society that needs to think to make a living and one can understand that slave owners can only be seen as a serious drain on the intellect of a society. Naturally of you have something against child molesters then you need look no father then the average slave owner to find one. Of coarse the excuse here was that they were after all not humans. Ulysses S. Grant sold his two black slaves AFTER the war because he was broke; slavery wasnt outlawed in the northern states until almost a year after the Civil War
I wish I knew. Dont you just hate when you need the answer and something like this comes up.
He didn't like the idea of slaves and the south consisted mainly of plantations with slaves and the owners didn't want to have to pay for labor. The civil war was the main part of that, but that was around the 1860's. Not many southern people hate Abraham Lincoln now.
i don't know the answer because answer.com isn't letting me know gosh man sometimes i hate the computer
Because was campaigning on a ticket of no new slave-states. When he won the 1860 election, it meant that the South would always be outvoted in Congress.
Frederick Douglass shows that slavery corrupts slave owners by illustrating how they exercise arbitrary power and cruelty over enslaved individuals, leading to a dehumanization of both parties. He also portrays how slave owners become morally compromised by justifying their actions through racist ideologies and perpetuating systemic oppression. Through his own experiences and observations, Douglass highlights how slavery erodes the moral fabric of society and the individuals involved.
He didn't