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.
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.
Phillis Wheatley, an enslaved African American poet, used her writing to criticize the institution of slavery and advocate for the abolition of it. She expressed deep empathy for the suffering of enslaved people and condemned the cruelty and injustice of slavery in her poems.
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).
William Miller, a prominent leader in the abolitionist movement, was fervently against slavery. He believed that it was morally wrong and a violation of human rights. Miller played a key role in advocating for the abolition of slavery in the United States.
Thomas Hobbes believed that slavery was a natural consequence of war and the state of nature. He argued that in a state of war, individuals could enslave those they defeated in order to preserve their own lives and security. Hobbes saw slavery as a means of maintaining order and preventing chaos in society.
About how they feel
The Southerners did not feel good about the future of slavery
I wasn't born when slavery was abolished, so I didn't feel anything about it.
they felt about slavery
bad
no the southern states approved of slavery and the northern states dissapproved of slavery
George Mcclellan Was Against Slavery But Fought In The War To Win.
Most people in the north of American were against slavery.
Indifferent For A+
It was one of the Confederate States - a slave state - and they felt slavery was okay.
He deeply hated him
Northerners were completely against slavery, and before the Civil War they took their hatred overboard by killing Southerners for their slavery.