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In North America, farmers plowing the rocky New England soil, or even the proud Virginians with their slave-run tobacco farms, did not have the luxury of turning their work over to others and moving to London. The Americans wanted cheap sugar and to be able to buy it anywhere, but they had no voice in Parliament. That made it extremely hard to take when Parliament sided with the sugar planters. Americans felt they were being cheated, silenced—in fact, enslaved. In 1733, Parliament ruled that an extra six cents must be added to the price of every gallon of molasses that did not come from an English source. If the colonists actually followed the rules of the Molasses Act, it would have terrible consequences. Molasses from French islands would now be too expensive—merchants could never make a profit. So they would have to turn to the English, who would surely raise their prices. This one law could cripple the entire North American trade with the sugar islands—if, that is, the colonists or the French followed the rules. But of course they did just the opposite. –Sugar Changed the World, Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos How do the authors use historical details to support the claim that the sugar trade led to the end of slavery? by demonstrating how taxation drove the abolitionist movement in America by illustrating Americans’ belief that all people should be free by emphasizing Parliament’s bias toward plantation owners by showing that Americans feared being enslaved by the English king

User Irmco
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Answer: A) By demonstrating how taxation drove the abolitionist movement in America.

Explanation: Got it right in Edg. 2020.

User Tyasia
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Answer:

A. by demonstrating how taxation drove the abolitionist movement in America.

Step-by-step explanation:

This excerpt of "Sugar Changed the World" gives us historical details that show how England's excessive taxation over molasses began to stir Americans up. They realized that, by having no voice in the Parliament, they had no way of preventing abuses from the British government, so independence from the Crown was the only option. As we know, after America began to fight for independence, there was a clash between the Southern and the Northern states. With America being independent, the North saw the necessity of freeing the slaves. It would be better for the country to have former slaves now working to make money and spend that money, promoting economic growth. The excerpt shows us the beginning of this process.

User Adokiye Iruene
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