Not sure what you're driving at with this since South Carolina had the cruelest slave system in British North America and was largely in favor of independence.
Pro-Slavery was very not really the Federalists' vast majority viewpoint. I also love the anti-federalist. But, slaver and leader Thomas Jefferson was not willing to compromise upon both the moral and political issues of chattel slavery.
Mr. Professor Sapper, are we going to change history by going back and utilizing the history found in these two threads upon further review or are we going to exist in ignorance of who we are and for what we are mostly in existence as United States citizens?
The arrogance here is assuming that decades of historians haven't seen and analyzed the material. There's nothing new here and nothing that hasn't been addressed by historians plenty.
I'm not a Hegelian. Synthesis is not how I approach the historical record, nor is his approach to historical theory practiced much by historians (though political scientists seem to have a weird obsession with it).
You will be moved to the journalism department because repeating what others are saying is important. Repeating what late 20th Century and 21 Century historians have stated is your gift.