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armed resistance

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armed resistance

In US history, period of militant opposition to slavery in the decade prior to the Civil War (1861–65). The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, which tightened regulations for the arrest, trial, and surrender of fugitive slaves, even in nonslave states, provoked an increasing wave of armed resistance to slavery. Violent clashes over fugitive slaves increased and attempts to protect escaped slaves through use of arms became more common. The period culminated in John Brown's unsuccessful raid on the US arsenal at Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, in 1859.

In Boston in 1854, armed resistance was considered such a threat that 2,000 soldiers were required to escort Anthony Burns, an escaped slave, to a ship that returned him to the South. The Dred Scott Decision of 1857, which ruled that African Americans were not US citizens and that slaves did not become free by entering a free state, further heightened tensions as the Civil War neared.



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Catholic Spain was invaded by Islamic soldiers and occupied; it was only armed resistance by the Christian knights and people of the region that led to the country being liberated.
A former Iraqi Army officer who claimed to be a leader of an armed resistance movement based in Anbar Province said in a telephone interview that Masri had been killed in fighting between Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia and militias tied to Sunni Arab tribes north-west of Baghdad.
If comparable laws were passed today, they would forbid American money to be used in Iraq for hostile purposes, which would be tantamount to forbidding armed resistance to the claims of the insurgents.
 
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