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  1. almost 14 years ago on Non Sequitur

    Marinedude,

    “Slavery is seen in the Constitution in a few key places. The first is in the Enumeration Clause, where representatives are apportioned. Each state is given a number of representatives based on its population - in that population, slaves, called “other persons,” are counted as three-fifths of a whole person. This compromise was hard-fought, with Northerners wishing that slaves, legally property, be uncounted, much as mules and horses are uncounted. Southerners, however, well aware of the high proportion of slaves to the total population in their states, wanted them counted as whole persons despite their legal status. The three-fifths number was a ratio used by the Congress in contemporary legislation and was agreed upon with little debate.

    In Article 1, Section 9, Congress is limited, expressly, from prohibiting the “Importation” of slaves, before 1808. The slave trade was a bone of contention for many, with some who supported slavery abhorring the slave trade. The 1808 date, a compromise of 20 years, allowed the slave trade to continue, but placed a date-certain on its survival. Congress eventually passed a law outlawing the slave trade that became effective on January 1, 1808.

    The Fugitive Slave Clause is the last mention. In it, a problem that slave states had with extradition of escaped slaves was resolved. The laws of one state, the clause says, cannot excuse a person from “Service or Labour” in another state. The clause expressly requires that the state in which an escapee is found deliver the slave to the state he escaped from “on Claim of the Party.”

    http://www.usconstitution.net/consttop_slav.html

    Prior to the establishment of the right to freedom in the abolition of slavery, slavery was approved by the constitution. Prior to the establishment of women’s right to vote in the bill of rights, women didn’t have that right.

    If you can’t understand these simple things, you need to go back to boot camp and have your Drill Sgt explain them in simple enough words for you to understand. (and don’t try the”She is against the military” argument just because I am saying you need educated–I am a carrier Army wife and I know this stuff is taught in boot camp.)