In my personal opinion they were treating us very badly like we were a third world country and they took a lot of things we had
Well, (the way I see it) when Southern Brewers was the only coffee supplier in the market. They could have prices as high as they'd liked, where else would people get good coffee. And so, Albert Coffee than comes along charging less than the leading supplier. And than Café Brites comes and marks their prices lower than the both of them.
Southern Brewers had to lower prices in order to keep up business. People are more apt to buy low cost idems. So if they wanted to continue being a top supplier, they needed to lower prices.
Anti-slavery would use this image to link abolitionists to slavery because it illustrates the poor treatment of slave transport
The illustration shows what the transport of slaves on ships was like, in it, you can see hundreds of black slaves from Africa organized in very narrow lines.
This image serves to argue opposition to slavery because it shows the deplorable conditions in which slaves were transported from Africa.
Under these conditions, many of them arrived dead due to
- intense heat
- lack of oxygen
- confined spaces.
They were also affected by infections and bacteria because they contained rats and the waste of slaves.
The anti-slavers argued that the slaves were mistreated from their transport and were poorly treated on the estates.
Note: This question is incomplete because the image is missing. Here is the image
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False apparently my answer was to short so i gotta add more words.
1. there were many inequalities that contributed to the French Revolution, the first group was the clergy, the second estate was made up of nobles, and the third estate was the vast majority of the people living in France. One inequality dealt with taxation. The first two estates didn't have to pay most of the taxes.
2. The impact was so big that eventually slaves were freed, because the declaration stated that “All men and women are born and remain free in equal rights”
3. France was broke. The nobility refused to pay more taxes, and the peasants simply couldn't. Even the opulent King Louis XVI, fonder of hunting and locksmithing than governing, recognized that a crisis loomed, they wanted to change between the ruler and the governs to help rebuild their political and economic power.
4. The biggest cause behind the French Revolution was a widespread discontent with the French monarchy and the poor economic policies of King Louis XVI.