|  | Posted by Citizen Bob on 11/07/06 20:33 
On Tue, 07 Nov 2006 18:45:22 GMT, Paul Hyett<pah@nojunkmailplease.co.uk> wrote:
 
 >>The Fugitive Slave Act made it "illegal" to aid an escaped slave.
 
 >Why was that law even passed, when the North was supposed to be
 >anti-slavery?
 
 Who said the North was "anti-slavery".
 
 There was an active abolitionist movement in the North but it was in
 the minority. Abolitionists pressured Lincoln to repeal the Fugitive
 Slave Act but they were not in the majority so he refused, knowing
 that if he did he would lose the election. Yet he did need the
 abolitionist vote so he concocted the Emancipation Proclamation (after
 forcing California to repeal its version) but this EP only applied to
 the "rebel territories".
 
 The North kept slaves throughout the War of Northern Agression and
 thereafter until the 13th Am was passed. By contrast the Confederate
 States of America freed the slaves a few months before Lee's
 surrender.
 
 
 --
 
 "First and last, it's a question of money. Those men who own the earth
 make the laws to protect what they have. They fix up a sort of fence or
 pen around what they have, and they fix the law so the fellow on the
 outside cannot get in. The laws are really organized for the protection of
 the men who rule the world. They were never organized or enforced to do
 justice. We have no system for doing justice, not the slightest in the world."
 --Clarence Darrow
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