Slavery and indentured servitude in some form of another were absolutely vital to the economic system. Otherwise, the profitable production of cotton would have been nearly impossible until the advent of the cotton gin.
Aha, didn't the founder of economics, Adam Smith, demonstrate that slavery was economically untenable? Nevermind the moral implications, unless someone here thinks there is a market for child prostitution to make money with. It was not needed, it was a
convenience and a fool's convenience at that.
Your promotion of the cotton gin also illustrates a very poor knowledge of its eventual effect: The cotton gin actually increased the 'want' for slavery in its effected region as demand increased. 1793 did not herald the end of slavery. Had it
not been invented, I imagine the yeomanry of the South would've been more pressed to usurp the plantation systems that were institutionalizing slavery.
They oppressed and repressed countless other societies within theirs -- why do you oppose their annihilation?
The Spainards replacing them were no better, and they went on to annihilate anything regardless of its actual culture. Lest we forget the Incans in South America.
It would have been like the Aztecs going over to destroy the Spanish -- who do you really cheer for when two imperialistic powers fight?
I didn't say such a thing, did I? If you will concentrate on what is happening and has factually happened, it would be far preferable than your tendency to make up history as you go along. This is not the first thread in which you have mutilated the past to suit your present needs, and I should then justly expect you to take another poster's material out of context. Ag
But you are wrong... They were morally and ethically backwards, practicing human sacrifice to nonexistent gods, and they were technologically in the stone age (making weapons of obsidian).
Technologically inferior? Their understanding of agriculture and astronomy exceeded that of their European conterparts. Tenochtitlan was (again) larger than most European cities, and much of Aztec architecture within was an impressive extention of Mesoamerican engineering. But did I not just mention the Thirty Years War? Ritualized sacrifice is, in the end, no bloodier than willful rape and pillage of Madgeburg or the surrounding countryside; among other atrocities that populate Western civilization. To say that the violence minded Europeans were 'ethically' and 'morally' superior is a sick and disgusting proposition when there were many peasants who ended up begging for death once the day came to a close.
Last, native Americans are offered countless scholarships and some receive restitution money in order to better themselves.
And this is compensation for a good deal of people who have difficulty getting out of High School? Throwing around scholarships does not make things better; sort of like how throwing around money doesn't really fix things. It's a nice way to sweep things under the rug.
If they cannot do it now, it's on them.
Sort of like how it was up to Africans to avoid forced sharecropping? Oh wait...
I do know that all of Asia has benefited exponentially from updated world views, new technologies and trade.
Meanwhile, ask everybody about how they thought of Japanese colonialism.
y on equal grounds.
Slavery was necessary and it hitherto has not been immoral. Slavery was a reasonable system that appeared in all societies.
Uh, no. I fail to see how essentially ensnaring and prostituting people is moral or necessary. Wait, were you aware that sexual abuse was common with slaves and their masters? Ah, but it was necessary for exercising that frustration, of course. Nevermind that all those people could've been free and making money and living more secure lives, but we have jmerville's distorted understanding of reality to live on.