Slavery as a Positive Good is an article written by John C Calhoun, seventh Vice President of the United States, in 1837 - he was, needless to say, an apologist for slavery.
No, Slavery has to be seen as the denial of freedom to the slave. It cannot have morality to treat another human in such a way. Although the Slave owner may benefit from this process the abject denial of the right of freedom to another is beyond acceptability to all except the most determined bigot. You'll probably have guessed by now I don't own any slaves ! The idea of positivity or goodness in the role of Slavery is not within my compass.
Was a positive good Was a positive good
the end of slavery.
umm.. nothing??? slavery was horrible
"Chains and Shackles: A Comprehensive Examination of Modern-Day Slavery"
Slavery ruins many people's lives.
Was a positive good Was a positive good
slavery was defended as a positive good
John C. Calhoun
It wasn't really a good thing, but back in Africa slavery was like a mark of honor; the more better you treated your slaves, the more honorable and highly regarded you were. SLAVERY IS CRUEL!
They generally had positive relations with Indians. They were opposed to slavery. They treated Indians with respect.
yes slavery was good for the south
One example of someone who was not an advocate for the abolition of slavery was John C. Calhoun. Calhoun was a prominent southern politician who vehemently defended slavery and argued for its preservation. He believed that slavery was a positive good and essential for the southern economy and way of life.
the end of slavery.
One of the most well-known defenses of slavery was written by Thomas R. Cobb, a pro-slavery legal theorist who published "An Inquiry into the Law of Negro Slavery in the United States of America" in 1858. Cobb argued that slavery was a positive good for both enslaved people and society as a whole.
The positive good theory is the idea that slavery was not, actually a "necessary evil," as Jefferson would describe it, but "a good-a positive good" institution for both blacks and whites in that whites get cheap manual labor and blacks benefit from the civilizing effect of being under the guidance of benevolent whites, and exposure to Christianity. The Positive good theory was John C. Calhoun's response during the Missouri crisis as to why slavery was continuing in the south. This theory became southern slaveholders justification from the 1820s through the Civil War. This idea, in similar form, was extended into the Jim Crow era, and is best represented in the film Birth of A Nation.
cruelty? There was nothing good about slavery.
umm.. nothing??? slavery was horrible