So what is your point? That living as a slave is better than dying free? That black people were better off as slaves in a foreign land than free in their native lands? That being treated well as a slave justifies slavery? That slavery was just an excuse for the North to invade the South? For what? All its rich industry? Its rich farmlands that existed no where else except most of the continent? That black people are just as guilty for owning slaves as white people at the time? I don't get it. What's the point of this thread?
I respectfully suggest your consternation is based on a perception in general terms rather than allowing for variation.
Evaluating the condition of "slavery" in contemporary terms is a flawed effort because of extremely differing social attitudes and values. Although slavery was criticized by a segment of the population in 1800s America, and was a perfectly acceptable practice in some parts of the world, it is universally deplored and prohibited today -- except in some parts of Africa.
When Black slaves were brought to America by the Dutch, Arab, and Portugese traders there was some understanding that they had been enslaved captive properties of opposing tribes and were facing extreme brutality or death had they not been sold for export. So it was not as if Americans had ventured into Africa and kidnaped relatively happy natives.
While it presumably is true that some holders were innately cruel and treated their chattel slaves brutally there is testimony that this was not universally true and that some slaves were held by relatively kind "masters" who treated them comparatively well.
Those who followed the recent BBC entertainment series,
Upstairs/Downstairs, and
Downton Abbey, and who watched the movie,
Gosford Park, are acquainted with what is described as accurate depictions of the acceptable status of
servitude as existed in Edwardian England. Except for the fact that servants in the houses of British nobilty were fundamentally free and could resign if they chose to, they were essentially engaged as compensated slaves in every aspect of their occupations. And there are accounts of Black slaves in America who worked in the plantation houses rather than in the fields and who led relatively comfortable lives, almost identical in fact to the lives of "servants" in British noble houses.
I am in no way attempting to justify, excuse, or mitigate for the condition of slavery, either here in America or anywhere else, because in humanistic terms it is a deplorable state of affairs. But evidence has gradually emerged to reveal that while the circumstances of slavery in America cannot be justified or forgiven it was not always the brutal horror it is typically thought of as being.
There were variations.