Chattel slavery is the kind of slavery that we know from the history of the US: when a person has an absolute power over another person's life, when this person belongs to another person "legally" or officially in some sense.
The slavery which is not chattel slavery is for example when a person for whatever reason is not free to terminate the contract but can for example move freely after working time and does not "oficially" belong to another person.
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Over the next several years, Jackson seized millions of acres of Indian lands in the southeast, eventually removing five Indian nations from their homes. As a result of the removals, these lands were opened to settlement and the establishment of new cotton plantations. Although some Indian nations chose to fight, in the end, most of the population was removed. The U.S. Army forcibly removed more than 15,000 Cherokees and marched them westward to "Indian Territory" in Oklahoma, a journey the Cherokee called the "Trail of Tears." As many as a quarter of the Indians died during the forced march, and the $6 million cost of the removal was deducted from the $9 million offered them for their land in the treaty they were forced to sign. The Removal Act of 1830 guaranteed the Indians lands in the west, but these promises were later broken.
Explanation:
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"Patrick Moore", who hosted the BBC program "The Sky at
Night" for more than 50 years; and just missed one episode.
He missed just a single episode when he was sick because of
an episode of food poisoning. Moore was a productive author on space science
whose exploration was utilized by both the U.S. and the Soviet Union in their space
programs.