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ich cannot be got rid of by violent or unjust means. Now, we beg leave to dissent totally from this declaration that no one denies that slavery is an evil. On the contrary, in this very city of New York, the foremost man of all its law, Chas. O'Conor, emphatically denies that it is an evil, and there are tens of thousands in that noble city, both in church and State, who hold that slavery has the sanction of Almighty God, in His revelation to man, that it was no evil to the Jews, and is no evil to our own countrymen. The ablest Scriptural argument ever heard on slavery was in a free State from a New Yorker. In many parts of the North, and even in New England, there are thousands of men who agree in opinion with Chas. O'Conor. As to the South, the time has long gone by when anybody considered it an evil. In what respects is it an evil — moral, social or political! Compare the people of the Southern States with those of any other community, and we challenge all history to pr