CAN SOMEONE PLEASE HELP ME!!! I have been stuck on this for 2 days
"All this is related by Americo, who adds that they returned to Spain and arrived at Cadiz with 222 Indian captives, where they were, according to him, very joyfully received, and where they sold all the slaves. Who will now ask whence they stole and carried off the 200 natives? This, as other things, is passed over in silence by Americo. It should be noted here by readers who know something of what belongs to right and natural justice, that although these natives are without faith, yet those with whom Americo went had neither just cause nor right to make war on the natives of those islands and to carry them off as slaves, without having received any injury from them, nor the slightest offence … What report, or what love would be spread about and sown among the natives, touching those Christians, when they left them wounded and desolate?"

—From The Letters of Amerigo Vespucci and Other Documents Illustrative of His Career
Translated by Clements R. Markham

In what way does the Vespucci excerpt predict the development of the encomienda system in New Spain?

It connects the moral debate on slavery with Counter-Reformation theory. (I know this one is wrong)

It connects the use of native people for free labor with religious conversion.

It suggests the conquest of the "New World" was morally unsustainable.

It undermines the necessary power of the explorers to shape colonial policy.

Respuesta :

It suggests that the conquest of the New World was morally unsustainable. The excerpt discusses the idea that, the resources, in the article human beings - the natives, as not having attacked or hurt the captors, the Spanish in this article. Regardless of their lack of religion, "without faith", that the natives were taken by an unjustified aggressor, the Spanish. And the author more or less states, with what right or moral justification do the Spanish have in taking these individuals. Foreshadowing and questioning the use of the inevitable encomienda system, which would of course abuse the natives, who had done nothing to provoke the colonist, other than living in the lands the colonists wanted to use and inhabit.