Must all of them and their families be physically abolished? Of course not? They must be 'liquidated' or melted in the hot fire of exile and labor into the proletarian masses.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Slavery can only be abolished by raising the character of the people who compose the nation; and that can be done only by showing them a higher one.
Every citizen should be a soldier. This was the case with the Greeks and Romans, and must be that of every free state.
All the principal people in the town are concerned in the slave trade, and their chief wealth consists in the number of slaves they possess; therefore there is little chance of the trade being, for many years, totally abolished.
Strip the proud nobility of their bloated estates, reduce them to a level with plain republicans, send forth to labor, and teach their children to enter the workshops or handle the plow, and you will thus humble proud traitors.
Slavery is but half abolished, emancipation is but half completed, while millions of freeman with votes in their hands are left without education.
I believe this government cannot endure permanently, half slave and half free.
The state is not abolished, it withers away.
Slavery to monarchs and ministers, which the world will be long freeing itself from, and whose deadly grasp stops the progress of the human mind, is not yet abolished.
For reforms ameliorate the situation of the working class, they lighten the weight of the chains labour is burdened with by capitalism, but they are not sufficient to crush capitalism and to emancipate the workers from their tyranny.
They weren't immigrating to some existing society; indeed, they often did whatever they could do to destroy whatever existed here in the way of Indian society.
No opposing quotes found.