According to Webster however, the main culprit in this dynamic is the rhetoric of the abolition societies. While the author acknowledges that these societies include mostly honorable and just people who believe in their cause, he also holds that their rhetoric has become unacceptably emotional and their tactics, such as spreading anti-slavery literature to the South, essentially dishonorable. According to the author, such tactics ironically lead only to strengthen the Southern cause and increase enmity and violence.
Resolution
William Henry Seward believes that the abolishment of slavery is inevitable as the economy and humanitarian institutions grow. According to this author, the institution is simply an "accidental" institution that came into being as a result of a combination of certain factors at a certain time. As times are changing, Seward appears to believe that the institution will become obsolete to make ways for new and more humane institutions. He however also sees the possibility of violent conflict in the attempt to either hasten or slow this development. Interestingly, he projects that attempting to perpetuate slavery is more likely to lead to violence than hastening its abolition.
Calhoun also suggests that a resolution is the responsibility of the North. He however bases this view not upon the moral right of the North or indeed the fact that slavery should be abolished. Instead,...
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