I don't think so about your question
The answer is:
They use primary-source quotations to show that enslaved people in Saint Domingue were willing to destroy property to gain their freedom.
In the excerpt from "Sugar Changed the World," the authors use primary-source quotations to provide evidence to support the historical events they describe with authentic details. The passage depicts the how slaves in Haiti set sugar fields on fire, and demolished warehouses and mills so that they could escape from enslavement.
False as because can be replaced by a semi colon
It's a hot summer afternoon near Soledad, California, sometime during the 1930's. Everyone is poor and scrambling around desperately for work,food, and money. We meet Lennie Small and George Milton: two guys among the poor and scrambling.