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    Rosa Parks and Civil Disobedience Rosa Parks once said‚ “Whatever my individual desires were to be free‚ I was not alone. There were many others who felt the same way” (Google Quotes) This means she was not the only one that wanted to be free. All the other African Americans wanted to be free too; they wished to sit wherever they wanted on the public buses. Rosa Parks involvement in civil disobedience was due to personal influences‚ She Chose to participate in civil disobedience to protest bus

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    In The Case Against Civil Disobedience the unknown author claims in his very first sentence that “the most striking characteristic of civil disobedience is its irrelevance to the problems of today” and that it is “the resort… exercised because the subject cannot or will not take up the rights and duties of the citizen.” What he fails to realize is that the rights and duties of a citizen is to keep an eye on the laws that rule the land and to revolt when those laws become unjust. It’s all part and

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    Civil Disobedience is the act of disobeying a law on grounds of moral or political principle. It is an attempt to influence society to accept a dissenting point of view. Although it usually uses tactics of nonviolence‚ it is more than mere passive resistance since it often takes active forms such as illegal street demonstrations or peaceful occupations of premises. The classic treatise on this topic is Henry David Thoreau’s "On the Duty of Civil Disobedience‚" which states that when a person’s conscience

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    Need of Civil Disobedience Civil disobedience is the act of expressing opinions towards the government’s policies and laws in order to create a vital change for society. As a free society‚ the people have the right to desire change and act upon it. Great advocates in the past have used peaceful resistance and successfully demonstrated their desires and opinions through the act of civil disobedience‚ and have made a positive impact on society when intentions are righteous. Overall‚ civil disobedience

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    Civil Disobedience and Its Effect On America’s Modern Society In a society with the freedoms to object to anything and everything the government can and will try and do‚ civil disobedience is a natural effect. Since the phenomenon is so common that there is a constant debate over its effect on society ‚ and if the government should do something to curve the amount of protests that occur. If the government were to do this though it would trample on the first amendment‚ more so than the government

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    fearful about what you are doing when it is right” said Rosa Parks‚ the mother of the civil rights movement. Parks exemplified the role of civil disobedience along with many others to peacefully fight for what they thought was unjust. So the question is‚ does civil disobedience negatively or positively affect society? In my opinion‚ it has a positive impact. Civil disobedience was brought up through Gandhi‚ an indian civil rights protestor. Gandhi left a mark on the world that would later introduce Americans

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    differences. The laws are something we cannot change or give opinion on. It is what t is‚ but society needs peaceful resistances to laws to positively impact society. We cant impact our society with the negatives. Negatives such as breaking the law‚ civil disobedience‚ and threats of the law. We have to be remembered for the good resistance that we have. In January 12th‚ 1964 it has been published by Charles Frankel is it right to break the law? The law is something everyone has to obey. As you know‚

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    “It is not always the same thing to be a good man and a good citizen” (Aristotle‚ Nicomachean Ethics). Although civil disobedience may cause divisive rhetoric and chaos‚ nonviolent resistance positively impacts a free society by providing an impetus for progress and starting a dialogue about injustice. Our nation was founded on principles of civil disobedience. In Federalist #51‚ James Madison proclaimed‚ “If angels were to govern men‚ neither external nor internal controls on government would

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    What form of civil disobedience would work best against a nation that functioned under a social contract that make racism‚ sexism classism‚ and ageism legal? I believe the best form of civil disobedience that would against this type of social contract would be egoism. With this form of civil disobedience anyone would do what he or she feels is best for them‚ and in the end they will find what is best for them is what is best for all. The two other options for civil disobedience Subjectivism and Cultural

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    Duty of Civil Disobedience” which gives his reasons for disliking the war which he though was to bring a surplus of slavery. In the essay it describes how he protests against slavery and thought it was wrong to own another human being for profit and labor. In the essay Thoreau discusses his opposition to the American Spanish war and he with others in the United States thought this war was an unjust war. Gandhi study Thoreau while away at school in London or South Africa. Gandhi linked civil disobedience

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