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25 Kommentare

  1. The-LeftWingedNeoCon on

    Washington DC abolished slavery in 1862 and Maryland abolished slavery in 1864. The Indian territory didn’t abolish slavery until 1866.

  2. amhira-of-rain on

    Huh I have learned a third interesting fact about my favorite boring state

  3. ComfortableLate1525 on

    THE NORTHWEST (Midwest) WILL RISE AGAIN

    (The industrial decline is just a temporary issue.)

  4. oatmealparty on

    NJ date isn’t accurate. NJ „banned“ slavery in 1804 but existing slaves were not freed. There were still some slaves in the state up until 1865 when the 13th amendment passed. Not sure what date the map is referring to.

  5. early_morning_guy on

    In 2024, Canada’s TFW program was labeled by the UN as a “gateway to contemporary forms of slavery.”

    For those not familiar with the program, it is extremely common in agriculture and low-wage jobs.

  6. 2_girls_1_cup_ on

    Shame on Brazil.

    Brazil has been a nightmare for our black people, and it has only changed a bit recently. Black people are the vast majority of those who live in ghettos, jails, slums and favelas. They have few opportunities and access to universities or well paid jobs, compared to white people. And they’re still suffering from prejudice and stereotypes.

    Some remote places in Brazil, specially at big farms, still enslaves workers and make them work (and live) under precarious conditions.

    We have changed our mindset about racial segregation, though. Racism is literally a crime, and even bad insults (like „monkey“) may pay you a visit at our detentions

  7. Revolutionary_Lock86 on

    It never was, just changed shape and function. Americans rarely get the opportunity to leave and most are in heavy debt. Why do you still tip? Why do so many have several jobs? If you get hurt you’ll most likely get even more debt.

  8. IceFireTerry on

    Brazil & Cuba were tripping with how long it took them to abolish slavery

  9. Let me get this straight.

    Mexico abolished slavery. And shortly after that, Texas seceded from Mexico driven by a desire for freedom and independence, right?

  10. evrestcoleghost on

    Argentina decraled freedom of womb in 1816 and any foreign slave who set foot on the country became free.

    Only reason slavery was completly abolished in 1853 was because they country spent 40 years in civil war

  11. themuscularbulbasaur on

    I know free black people did expand westward and participate in manifest destiny to a degree, but I wonder how many slaves were taken to the West before the 1865.

  12. The U.S. map is so incorrect. Most of the grayed out parts had legal slavery up to 1862, almost all of the later components of the Northwest Territories grandfathered slaves already present into the 1800s and beyond, Vermont had a legal slavery through a loophole to at least 1791 (and technically to the 13th Amendment), New York allowed legal slaves in its state to 1841, Pennsylvania had a legal slave as late as 1856, New Jersey did not abolish slavery until the 13th Amendment, Oklahoma had legal slavery beyond the 13th Amendment until 1866, Maryland abolished slavery in 1864, Kansas in 1860, Nebraska in 1861, New Mexico in 1861, Arizona in 1861.

  13. Present_Student4891 on

    I saw slave children in northern Mali when I crossed the Sahara in 1988.

  14. Right after abolition, Brazil’s monarch system fell, the emperor was exiled, and the Brazilian republic took its place.

  15. There’s a reason why a bunch of confederates fled to Brazil after the CSA got its ass handed to it.

  16. Advocaatastrophe on

    What’s labeled as „Canada“ was not Canada in 1833. Slavery continued among First Nations groups in what is now British Columbia into the 1890s.

  17. A do Brasil tá faltando a do Ceará que foi abolida 1884, 4 anos antes do resto do Brasil

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