Preview

Examples Of Persuasive Speech On Slavery

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
380 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Examples Of Persuasive Speech On Slavery
Ladies and Gentlemen,

Recent developments from the Union have brought up the concern that slavery should be abolished. I know my audience, and I know that many of you are the same as I. You are farmers, just like I was. Born and raised on the cotton fields in the south. What do the northerners know about farming? What do they know about the blacks?

Our farms provide them with work, shelter and food. This treatment is better than what some poor Americans receive. If they cannot be happy about this, then what will they settle with? As a wise man once said, “Never before has the black race of Central Africa … attained a condition so civilized…”

Furthermore, this structure is the natural state of mankind. Slavery has existed throughout all of

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Thank you so much for this amazing opportunity. Would you like me to bring in the completed forms prior to training at a time convient for you, or just to the first training on Wednesday April 27th at 3:00 pm? I look forward to becoming part of the Wilfrid Laurier University Aquatics team.…

    • 63 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    James Henry Hammond, a passionate supporter of slavery, delivered a speech about the importance of cotton to the economy. This speech, named “Cotton is King” discussed the indistinguishable divide between the Northern industry, and Southern plantations. The Southern plantations produced cotton that the industrial North later spun, sewed, and stitched before exporting to trade partners. At the time that this speech was delivered, the United States consumed cotton at an alarming rate, so the South attempted to use this argument to justify their ownership of slaves. However, the North had twice the amount of economic prosperity in population, commodity output, farm acreage, factories, and railroad mileage. The North’s economic stability shows that it didn’t rely on the South, debunking the myth claimed in “Cotton is King” and falsifying another argument in favor of slavery. The failure of the Constitution to mention slavery, or slavery in relation to the economy, allowed the South to argue the use of slavery because of its positive benefit to the national…

    • 1066 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The fact that the south’s economy was based off of agricultural goods was one of the reasons that slavery became so common down there. Compared to the south,…

    • 614 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Slaves supported the U.S.A.’s economy by working the plantations and producing many of the crops. The major reason farmers in the south were able to maintain their production and make so revenue was because the slaves provided nearly free labor. Solomon Northup expressed this by saying that “An ordinary day’s work is two hundred pounds (of cotton)” (103). If slaves hadn’t been available, the South would not have been able to develop its economy as quickly.…

    • 421 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    By1860, the slave states had approximately four million slaves making up approximately one-third of the South's population. However, opposition to slavery began as early as the 1700's by religious leaders and philosophers in North America and Europe who condemned the practice, arguing that slavery was contrary to God's teachings and violated basic human rights. During the Revolutionary War, many Americans came to feel that slavery in the United States was wrong because they believed that protection of human rights was one of the founding tenets of the United States, and slaves were not accorded rights. Slavery was likely opposed more rapidly in the North in part because fewer people in the North owned slaves. Northern abolitionists began organized efforts to end the practice of slavery in the 1800's. But much of the American South, believed that slavery was vital to the continuation of its livelihood and lifestyle and therefore defended the institution of slavery.…

    • 1650 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Did you know slavery has always been part of Human Society? Slaves have been in history for thousands of years. The oldest records of slavery can be found in the oldest of records. The oldest record that includes references of slavery can be found in the Sumerian Code of Nammu which contains laws regarding to slaves. Slaves were in all societies who practiced the institution usually gathered their slaves from other conquered cities and kingdoms. Slavery in Colonial times came when Britain began creating Colonies in North and South America to produce and harvest raw materials to create manufactured goods in Britain. Slaves came to America in order to work massive plantations that produced raw…

    • 2384 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    e. Emmett and his cousins were picking cotton that Monday morning. That following Wednesday, with the few pennies that they made, they decided to go to Bryant’s Grocery and Meat Market to purchases candy, soda pops, bubble gum, etc. (You know the usual a teenager would buy with his pennies.)…

    • 768 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Before I begin my exposition, I want to take a moment to quote the wise King Solomon’s book of Ecclesiastes, whereupon he has written, “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.” Indeed, everything that man sought throughout history has been but one vain attempt after another to satisfy our lust, our wish to conquer and own everything. This fool’s wish hath bent man into a crooked being, to the point of forcefully enlisting the aid of unwilling others to achieve this impossible goal. One of those among the unwilling was in life my grandfather.…

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Yet antebellum women moved towards using the individualism rhetoric to explore women’s roles. As the roles of men and women became radically distinct under the separate spheres philosophy, white women’s roles as homemaker and mother became glorified. They became seen not as naturally dependent on men but equal but different. For example, even moderate Catherine E. Beecher who claimed women had inferior roles because of the “Creator,” compared women to employees to express their freedoms. Reformers like Margaret Fuller also used the separate spheres argument, but Fuller reiterated Emerson’s ideas about individualism, writing “We [women] only ask of men to remove arbitrary barriers…. I believe it needs that woman show herself in her native dignity.” Thus women…

    • 577 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    It is impossible to understand the South without dissecting the reasons for the introduction of slavery, which was rooted so deeply into traditional Southern culture that the two are often mistaken for each other. Upon arrival in America, Europeans had one specific goal in mind: to cultivate the foreign land for the purpose of making money and returning back to Europe to recreate a higher social status. With this motivation in mind, it is easier to understand why these settlers of the South were drawn to the chattel system. Planters, who believed that they were entirely unsuitable for this kind of backbreaking work, quickly realized the unparalleled profits to be had from utilizing cheap and easily manipulated labor. The mass production of the tobacco plant served as a major catalyst for the adoption of African slavery as the South’s labor system.…

    • 1767 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The extreme heat made droplets of water slowly trickle down his face. There’s a brown, heavy sack tied around his waist, decreasing his speed by the minute. He retrieves white, cotton shaped, puffs from the ground, being careful not to puncture his finger. A rich, white man walks by, and in his glance was a half-filled brown sack. He immediately draws out a long, black leather rope with a handle and strikes the black man. “Hurry up, finish,” the white man said “you have only but a few minutes”. The Bill of Rights, located in the U.S Constitution has an amendment that abolishes slavery. So why do we have more than twenty million slaves captured today? Slavery is an unacceptable and unfair practice that can lead to human trafficking, abuse, and even war.…

    • 547 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The issue of Slavery, though believed by some to be no longer evident, is still, unfortunately, a huge industry throughout the entire world. A few include, sweatshops, sex trades, and even drug cartels. All these plague society, of the, “modern world.” Even though, many years ago, we claimed to have, “abolished,” slavery, the true reality, is that we only ended it in one aspect, in one place. We don't truly look at what still exists. We turn our back to the real issues, to simply pretend that they don't exist.…

    • 486 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Around the world today a lot has been going on with African American male’s lives being taking. It’s getting to the point where I have to think. Will African American males be able to walk down the street or go somewhere without someone having to go with them. They shouldn’t have to live their lives like this. Each and every one might do wrong in a time in their lives but you can’t hold that against them. Everyone make mistake in their life time. These are people children that are being taking away from their home, family, and friends. We have to put an end to it. You may not care because it might not be someone from your family. Stop and think about if it was. How would you feel then? Black lives matter, all live matter.…

    • 867 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Persuasive Speech

    • 909 Words
    • 3 Pages

    PTSD or Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is a psychiatric disorder that can occur following the experience or witnessing of life-threatening events such as the military combat, natural disasters, terrorism incidents, or any major tragedy. This is common in the life of veterans and is the leading cause of suicide among veterans. A VA patient who survived in Baghdad shares his experience with PTSD and explains how he knew he had this disability. Many veterans speak out about this issue and describe their continuous anger, alcohol addiction, and constantly wanted to fight. They usually feel very isolated and distant from their loved ones. One patient states, “PTSD involves rocketing into extreme states of stress re-activity; in the form of terror, rage, and uncontrollable impulses, and plunging into equally extreme states of being shut-down—exhaustion, emotional numbing, despair, and dissociation”. PTSD is about having fear and anxiety, allowing veterans to rage with anger and different emotion. There are many factors to PTSD, which affects others in different ways; or example, using video games to keep them occupied, spending money due to the lack of impulse control because of changes in their brain, and even not obtaining another job.…

    • 909 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Persuasive Speech

    • 1070 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Attention Getter: I would like to start my presentation off by telling you all to ask yourselves a series of fairly straight forward questions. I want you to take a look at you’re, any hand and ask your selves “Who’s hand is this?” Do the same with your other hand, and now both legs and your arms if you would like. If I am not mistaking the answer to all your questions are mine right. They are your hands, legs, and arms. What I am trying to get through to you all today is that your body is your body and that a person should be able to profit of his or her own body if done in a safe and controlled way.…

    • 1070 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays