After аbоut twо weeks, а nаil enhancement will frequently require a __________ service.
Anаlyze the fоllоwing excerpt frоm the Constitutionаl Convention debаte over the international slave trade: Col. [George] Mason [of Va.]. This infernal trade originated in the avarice of British merchants… The present question concerns not the importing states alone, but the whole Union.... Maryland and Virginia, he said, had already prohibited the importation of slaves expressly. North Carolina had done the same in substance. All this would be in vain if South Carolina and Georgia be at liberty to import. The Western people are already calling out for slaves for their new lands, and will fill that country with slaves, if they can be got through South Carolina and Georgia. Slavery discourages arts and manufactures…. They produce the most pernicious effect on manners. Every master of slaves is born a petty tyrant. They bring the judgment of Heaven on a country. As nations cannot be rewarded or punished in the next world, they must be in this. By an inevitable chain of causes and effects, Providence punishes national sins by national calamities. He lamented that some of our Eastern [Northeastern] brethren had, from a lust of gain, embarked in this nefarious traffic....He held it essential, in every point of view, that the general government should have power to prevent the increase of slavery. Mr. Ellsworth [of Conn.], as he had never owned a slave, could not judge of the effects of slavery on character. He said, however, that it was to be considered in a moral light, we ought to go further, and free those already in the country. As slaves also multiply so fast in Virginia and Maryland that it is cheaper to raise than import them, whilst in the sickly rice swamps foreign supplies are necessary, if we go no further than is urged, we shall be unjust towards South Carolina and Georgia. Let us not intermeddle… Question: Why did Ellsworth state that “he had never owned a slave, could not judge of the effects of slavery on character…however, that it was to be considered in a moral light, we ought to go further, and free those already in the country”? In other words, what information helps to accurate analyze why Ellsworth said this after Mason gave his impassioned position?