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  3. mmmm yes undoubtedly

mmmm yes undoubtedly

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Lemmy Shitpost
lemmyshitpost
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  • R [email protected]

    It was a very popular civil movement and governments were essentially forced to act.

    the petition in 1814 got 1,375,000 signatures.

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    [email protected]
    wrote last edited by
    #81

    Is this true? Or am I getting woooooshed?

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    • V [email protected]

      Is this true? Or am I getting woooooshed?

      R This user is from outside of this forum
      R This user is from outside of this forum
      [email protected]
      wrote last edited by
      #82

      In 1972, 400,000 british people (of 6 million at the time) gave up sugar to boycott slavery. Seventy years later, mill workers of Manchester supported embargo of Confederacy during US civil war by refusing to handle cotton picked by enslaved people. This came at a hefty personal cost as their way of making living depended on it. Abraham Lincoln later acknowledged this show of support. There's statue of him in Manchester.

      The British abolishment movement was so popular that they had more signatures demanding the end of slavery than the total amount of votes in the last election. Later, at it's peak, something like 25% of the entire British naval budget went towards capturing and freeing slave ships.

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