Because European rulers,however,feared the French Revolution. By Peng
The Hebrews were enslaved by the Egyptians. The Egyptian people didn't necessarily enslaved the Hebrews, The Hyksos took over Egypt and then they feared that the Hebrews were to powerful so they enslaved them.
Their work force of slaves. They most feared that slavery would be abolished.
Repuublican party? lol funny http://www.urbandictionary.com/author.php?author=AnitChrist&page=2
Because European rulers,however,feared the French Revolution. By Peng
They were treated very, very badly. Initially, they were enslaved. They were bought and sold like farm animals, fed very little, allowed little sleep, and forced to work very hard for no pay. They were denied education, as slaves, and later as free. The slave owners feared them being able to survive on their own, and others feared them competing with them for labor. So they were made to be ignorant and then mistreated in society because they were denied educational opportunities.
They worked and lived in larger groups and were feared more than a small number of slaves
They believed at that time that their power was annointed to them directly by god. and since people feared god, they feared the kings as they were gods presence on earth.
English colonists adopted slavery in order to meet the labor demands of their profitable industries, such as tobacco and sugar plantations. They saw enslaved Africans as a cheap and abundant source of labor that would help them maximize profits in their colonies. Additionally, they used racist ideologies to justify the enslavement of Africans and perpetuate the system.
They thought that if they gave them guns and tought them how to fight they feared that they might revolt in the enslaved population. Robert Selig reflects on African Americans in the Continental Army. Island, and Connecticut agreed to again ban all blacks, free or enslaved, from their militias.
They feared Napoleon would destabilize the balance of power in Europe.
Southern planters opposed the Wilmot Proviso because it sought to prohibit slavery in any territory acquired from Mexico, threatening their economic interests and political power. They feared it would upset the delicate balance between free and slave states, potentially leading to the abolition of slavery in the United States.