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Slaveholding Weighed in the Balance of Truth, and Its Comparative Guilt Illustrated cover

Slaveholding Weighed in the Balance of Truth, and Its Comparative Guilt Illustrated

Chapter 2: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

A forceful moral and rhetorical examination argues that the institution of slavery inflicts vast temporal and eternal harms and must be judged among the gravest human crimes. The pamphlet draws sustained parallels between slavery and other oppressive systems to illustrate how slavery enforces ignorance, appropriates labor and earnings, strips legal and familial protections, and employs physical torture, sale, and death to maintain control. It catalogs specific abuses—forced labor, denial of religious and educational access, separation of families—and criticizes the complacency of public opinion, the press, and religious leaders, urging an immediate, energetic response to awaken conscience and oppose the system.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] Read Bourne's Picture of Slavery.

[2] This occurrence was not very far South, otherwise, there would have been no shame.

[3] The author disapproves of interference at the expense of human life, but believes that all possible means short of the shedding of blood, are justifiable.