Throughout history, the oppression of one group often leads to their rebellion. This statement has been true throughout history, and holds true for a number of domestic terrorist groups focused on fighting for African American lives. The largest number of African American activist terrorist groups existed in the late 1900s, however, the systematic oppression that existed in the 1900s and today started in the 18th and 19th centuries, before the American Civil War. Before the Civil War, one of the main causes of the abolition of slavery, slavery of African American people was prevalent throughout the United States. Almost 30 percent of people in slave owning states owned slaves, and most slaveowners treated their slaves like objects, rather than people. In 1787, a compromise was passed regarding the legal status of Black slaves in a population count. It was stated that rather than being counted the same as a white person, any African American slave would be considered three-fifths of a person. This allowed the South, the area with the highest concentration of slaves, to gain more representation in the House of Representation since they held a higher population. However, this compromise only furthered the oppression that Black slaves faced. Already treated as
Throughout history, the oppression of one group often leads to their rebellion. This statement has been true throughout history, and holds true for a number of domestic terrorist groups focused on fighting for African American lives. The largest number of African American activist terrorist groups existed in the late 1900s, however, the systematic oppression that existed in the 1900s and today started in the 18th and 19th centuries, before the American Civil War. Before the Civil War, one of the main causes of the abolition of slavery, slavery of African American people was prevalent throughout the United States. Almost 30 percent of people in slave owning states owned slaves, and most slaveowners treated their slaves like objects, rather than people. In 1787, a compromise was passed regarding the legal status of Black slaves in a population count. It was stated that rather than being counted the same as a white person, any African American slave would be considered three-fifths of a person. This allowed the South, the area with the highest concentration of slaves, to gain more representation in the House of Representation since they held a higher population. However, this compromise only furthered the oppression that Black slaves faced. Already treated as