elizabeth cady stanton had a really interesting case. had a level of social equality certainly political equality between black and white people. that was kind of a long and sad story. i do not know if you guys have gotten into the host war period yet. there was going to be in a memo to the constitution to give both black people and women the vote. at a congressman went to frederick douglass and said, we are prepared to give black people the votes, but if you insist on attaching women to this, no one is going to pass this. i think elizabeth cady stanton never forgive him for that. she was really upset. she then goes out and campaigns to get the women's issues attached back to the amendment. she says, well, if you are going to give those black people they vote -- it's very ugly. relatively few abolitionists of this time would fit our definition of complete racial equality. at i think theodore parker would. william lord part -- william lloyd garrison probably would. you get to mainstream abolitionists, you would find some who believed in p