Give the correct answer with detailed explanation and don't copy from internet...
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D Question 1 1 pts In his chapter "The Republican Critique of the South," Eric Foner argues that: Republican opposition to slavery was motivated less by a concern for the welfare of slaves than it was by their belief that slavery undermined the dignity of labor for white men. Most Republicans believed that the poor whites of the south were better off than the poor whites of the north. Republicans in the 1850s gave little thought to the importance of slavery in the western territories. Republicans worried that the economy of the slave south would dramatically outperform the economy of the north.D Question 3 1 pts In his Appeal ... to the Coloured Citizens of the World (1830), African American writer David Walker argues that: Because of slavery, the United States is the most tyrannical and cruel country in the world. Despite the cruelty of the system, enslaved African Americans maintain their dignity and kindness. Free blacks are too few in number to do anything about the institution of slavery. White Americans have no interest in Walker's writings.Question 4 1 pts Sarah Grimke's Letters on the Equality of the Sexes (1838) argues that: Men and women alike would benefit from sexual equality. The traditional division of labor between men and women is based on their natural abilities and preferences. OMen generally desire the intellectual and moral improvement of women, but women resist it because they are used to being supported by their husbands. The laws of the United States benefit women as much as men.Question 5 1 pts According to Harriet Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (1861): ODr. Flint threatened Harriet with death if she told anyone what he was doing to her. Harriet wished that she lived on a plantation rather than in town, because on a plantation she would have more protection from her owner. Harriet was protected from her owner's desire to exploit her sexually by his wife, who protected her from him. O Harriet was protected by law from her owner's desire to exploit her sexually.D Question 7 1 pts In his chapter "The Republican Critique of the South," Eric Foner argues that: The antislavery arguments of Republicans in the 1850s could appeal both to abolitionists who wanted to improve the lot of slaves, and to racists who cared little for slaves' welfare. Moderate and conservative Republicans preferred the economic argument against slavery to the moral argument. Pro-slavery Southerners considered Northern capitalism to be morally bankrupt. OAll of the above