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Rights And The Constitution In Black Life During The Civil War Essay

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OPTION A:
RIGHTS
“For whites, freedom, no matter how defined, was a given, a birthright to be defended. For African-Americans, it was an open-ended process, a transformation of every aspect of their lives and of the society and culture that had sustained slavery in the first place.” (Foner 591)
“History is written by the victors” and the victors have always been the oppressor. Firstly, the colonizers went to America just for escaping their own lands where they were persecuted or affected by the economic crisis. Then they became the oppressors instead of the victims when they started to slave Indian Americans. That is because the power resides in white, wealthy men. As long as they stand the power they will persecute the different, the rebel, the weak. America was the …show more content…

Americans were fighting for their own rights, not the slaves’ or the Indians’. Fighting against the North at the same time as guaranteeing their rights was only for “the owners”.
The reason is that having the power given to a man-white supremacy, we will always find racism in their politics. Consequently, we have a problem of human rights (slavery), racism (blacks) and misogyny (women). We, as humanity, needed a manifesto of human rights because until that agreement the power was going to be sustained by the same status quo. Furthermore, we could agree that everybody has the same rights regardless of their own background. Unfortunately, nobody thinks alike.
It was not only happening with black people, but with Indians, poor, women and so on. Powerful men would see them not as a threat to their interest but more like an obstacle or objects they could use. Consequently, they acted the way they did. The only guaranteed rights were their own. There was not place for the

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