While using definition King discussing just and unjust laws in the judicial system then. A just law from King's words is, "a man-made code that squares with the moral law or the law of God". King talks about an unjust law by saying, "a code that is out of harmony with the moral law". These definitions are used by King and how he discusses why segregation is so wrong and unnecessary. " segregation is not only politically, economically, and sociologically unsound, it is morally wrong and awful." King says this discussing how he disagrees with segregation. Throughout King's letter he defines some of the words use to help the reader with his point of…
Examples of injustice can first be found in the area of family laws. In Law 195, it states that “If a son has struck his father, his hands shall be cut off.” (Doc C) This is unfair because if a son gets mad and hits his father, should he really have his hands cut off? You might be thinking, if he really meant to hit his dad, it would be a just punishment because he can’t hit anyone again, but if they cut off his hands, he would be a burden to society, unable to help out, and needing extensive care; is that fair to society? Second, in Law 129 the punishment for adultery is being bound and thrown into the water (Doc C). Does the punishment fit the crime? Then you…
Finally address the following: Laws can also be unjust (ethically wrong). Unjust laws must be disobeyed. So makes a law unjust? What do you think about Dr. King's explanation of unjust laws? What are some examples of laws in American History that would qualify as unjust? Research the internet for your…
The first thing that Dr. King writes is what he thinks just and unjust laws mean. These two definitions gives us an idea of what he thinks just and unjust signify, before he goes deeper into the differences. Dr. King defines a just law as “any law that uplifts the human personality”. Dr. King is implying that if a law makes somebody feel good about themselves and makes them feel better, it is just. As used by Dr. King, just means reasonable, and…
In my opinion,yes, a duly enacted law can be morally wrong. “A rule can also be bad because it requires something that is wrong…like a law that requires racial segregation in hotels and restaurants.” (p47) Consider lethal injections, abortions, and gay marriages. Are these laws morally right? The answers to these questions follow in accordance to one’s personal beliefs. There isn’t much that we as a society can do about laws besides…
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere” (King, April 16, 1963) this quote was said by Martin Luther King Jr. Injustice is a synonym of the word unfairness; meaning, that injustice is when people are not being fair. In the cases of To Kill a Mockingbird, The Scottsboro Boys and The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire Injustice was a part of the verdict. In To kill a Mockingbird Tom Robinson was accused of raping Mayella Ewell. In the Scottsboro boys case the nine boys that were found on the train were accused by the two women that they raped the two women. In the shirtwaist fire the women were suing the owners of the building because they locked the women in and there were no exits. The women pleaded and the jury still found the owners not guilty. In the trials the Scottsboro boys, Tom Robinson and The shirt waist fire women were falsely accused of what they did. Each defendant/prosecution was accused for something they didn’t do. (Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird) (Scottsboro Boys, Documentary)…
One law that declared unconstitutional was the Test Oath Law which required attorneys to swear under oath that they were not involved in the southern rebellion. The law was unconstitutional because it was saying they were being punished for using their freedom of expression. Another law that was shot down is Child Labor Laws These laws were both were trying to end child labor but twice it was declared unconstitutional allowing child labor. Soon the laws were changed “But the amendment failed to win ratification by a sufficient number of states before the Court itself in 1941 overruled its earlier decisions.” (CQ Press…
This nation is not perfect, so we can only hope to improve it. To do so, we must find and criticize the hypocrisy in our country’s history with the fairness they once promised to their people. It is evident that the Preamble of the United States Constitution was hypocritical in 1787 because of the narrow vision of “the People,” because of the economic divide, and because of the issues plaguing their justice system, all proving that the promises written in the Preamble went unfulfilled in the year it was made. Foremost, the Constitution’s definition of “We the People” did not extend to all in its land, challenging the possibility of forming a more perfect union when the people in this union were treated unequally. For example, the circumstances of the African Americans did not reflect these ideals truly, as they are referred to as “such Persons” in Article 1, Section 9, Clause 1 of the Constitution: People.…
King says an unjust law is “a code that a numerical or power majority group compels a minority group to obey but does not make binding on itself….difference made legal.”…
Consider another unjust is the rites of people are not equal like women don't have equal rights like men do.…
As American citizens, we withhold freedoms like no other country. When we begin to abuse these freedoms, that’s when injustice occurs. The definition of Injustice is lack of fairness. The late Dr. Martin Luther King, JR. stated that “Injustice anywhere is a threat to Justice everywhere.” There are many categories’ that can fall into Injustice.…
For example, in Minnesota, it’s illegal to stand around any building unless you’ve got a reason to be there. This law is unjustified and citizens will be bound to break this one. So some laws are meant to be broken so the government can be involved. Most laws are meant to be broken because they are not properly revised.…
Imagine a person that wanted to get out of a place where they know that they have no future in. That person aims to go to a place where their dreams will be accomplished and a place where they know they will have a better future but when the person gets there, that is all crushed. That person finds out that people treat them differently based off of where they come from. The person doesn’t get the same rights as everyone else does because they are immigrants. What would you feel like if you were someone like that? People feel horrible when this happen. Immigrants are affected by this. Unequal rights affect for immigrants affects everything like for example other people's action, health care, bullying, jobs, and a problem to our society. This…
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness." -Declaration of Independence. Most American citizens would agree with that quote from the document in which our government was built upon. Freedom. What does that mean to us? Many would say that freedom means: freedom of speech or freedom of religion. The question is, what does that mean to an immigrant? What is freedom to those who spend their lives in poverty or in a third world country eating dirt cookies such as the Haitians. For many, it could mean a break. “Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free”-The new Colossus. Have we forgotten what this truly means? What the "American Dream" is? The idea of freedom. The longing for peace. The space to breathe without the fears of punishment for believing a certain…
"I am in Birmingham because injustice is here," wrote Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in his "Letter from Birmingham Jail" (King 416). Eight Alabama clergymen composed a statement urging restraint in the Civil Rights movement and the discontinuance of demonstrations in Birmingham. The clergymen explained that progress could best be achieved through negotiation and through the court system and suggested that direct action would only make the situation worse. In response to this statement, Martin Luther King, Jr. composed his famous “Letter from Birmingham Jail” to explain why he was active in civil rights demonstrations, primarily because of the failure of the courts and negotiation to address the issue of civil rights effectively. One of King's most important and most extended arguments begins with the distinction between just and unjust laws. He begins by stating one has a legal and a moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws. "I would agree with St. Augustine that an unjust law is no law at all" (King 420). A distinction is made that an unjust law is a human law that is not rooted in eternal law and natural law and by contrast, any law that…