referendum
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- Nov 13, 2005
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I've been studying US history of late, including the slavery controversy. One little known aspect of Slavery in the US was that South Carolina re-legalized the importation of foreign slaves into South Carolina from 1803 until 1808, at which time all foreign slave importations were banned in any US state, as part of an original constitutional compromise. South Carolina did this in order to cash in on the demand for slaves that was envisioned coming from the newly acquired Louisiana purchase territories. About 40,000 new African slaves were brought in over these five years. The South Carolina legislature almost stopped this disastrous immigration in 1805, but it tragically failed to pass the state senate by one vote. This extra 40,000 new slaves represented a little under 10% of the total US slave population at the time. Had South Carolina not done this, its likely that the future overall US slave population, and today's total US black population would have been that much smaller. Talk about a self inflicted shot to the head, South Carolina, what were you thinking?