At the end of the US Civil War there were no slaves, they had all been freed during the war and by the fact that the South lost the war. Thus your question makes no sense and can not be answered.
So angry and humiliated that some of them started-up the Ku Klux Klan.
The Southerners did not feel good about the future of slavery
They felt as if they were still treated like slaves.
I think they felt a little mischivious and sneaky
well i feel that he was trying to free the slaves and bascially jus tryna have every thing equal and fair
So angry and humiliated that some of them started-up the Ku Klux Klan.
The northerners felt slavery was bad, although they bought cotton from the south that the slaves made. The southerners felt slavery was very useful to make and sell goods.
They were dependant on the military because of their loss in the Civil War which makes them feel angry for power.
The Southerners did not feel good about the future of slavery
Many Southerners supported the Dred Scott decision because it reinforced the rights of slaveholders to take their slaves into free territories. They viewed the decision as a victory for states' rights and property rights over federal power.
Northerners were completely against slavery, and before the Civil War they took their hatred overboard by killing Southerners for their slavery.
They felt as if they were still treated like slaves.
Southerners generally viewed the three new amendments—the 13th, 14th, and 15th—implemented after the Civil War with resentment and resistance. The 13th Amendment abolished slavery, which many in the South opposed as it disrupted their socio-economic systems. The 14th Amendment granted citizenship and equal protection under the law to former slaves, and the 15th Amendment aimed to secure voting rights for Black men, provoking fears of lost political power among white Southerners. Overall, these amendments were seen as impositions by the federal government that threatened their traditional way of life.
Southerners generally viewed the Freedmen's Bureau with suspicion and hostility. Many white Southerners resented the bureau's efforts to assist formerly enslaved people, seeing it as an infringement on their rights and a tool of federal overreach. The bureau's focus on promoting education and civil rights for African Americans was perceived as a threat to the social order that had existed prior to the Civil War. This antagonism contributed to ongoing tensions during the Reconstruction era.
The white Southerners do not like change. The Southerners are set in their own ways.
Not currently, alot of people feel it is disrespectful to rebuild the twin towers.
They felt equal to them