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    citizens and human beings to oppose any oppression enforced upon their fellow citizens. Before choosing to follow civil disobedience‚ one must fully understand what it means. Civil disobedience is a form of peaceful political protest. If there hadn’t been any civil disobedience in the world‚ countess laws and even nations might not exist. America‚ for example was built off of civil disobedience. The country wouldn’t exist if it didn’t stand up against Britain. If someone hadn’t stood up for women’s rights

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    being fought against. Tragic events like the Los Angeles riots of 1992 are a perfect example of people joining together out of hate for violence. Typically‚ when discussing civil disobedience the heroic story of Martin Luther King Jr. fighting segregation in the South comes to mind. However‚ the best example of civil disobedience is Mahatma Ghandi peacefully protesting in India. From disagreement to triumph‚ Ghandi stuck to satyagraha‚ or devotion to truth. Ghandi protested many unjust laws and bad

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    Civil disobedience‚ an action in our modern society that is called childish‚ ignorant‚ or unruly. However‚ everyone forgets the unprecedented times when civil disobedience has brought the world further and further. Civil disobedience is the act of not conforming to the government’s commands or laws. When this term is used we never think of the positive effects‚ instead we view it negatively. If it really is so horrible then what of the greats? Martin Luther of the 1500s‚ Rosa Parks‚ Tiananmen Square

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    Olaf Thorson Johnson IB English‚ Period 4 January 1‚ 2013 Civil Disobedience and Antigone Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech focuses on the importance of freedom and brotherhood in a nation and is intended to rally Americans to demonstrate their anger at the injustices of segregation and racism through “creative protest.” While King’s passion and anger at the status quo is obvious in the text‚ he specifically states that they “must not allow [their] [protest] to degenerate into

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    The subject of civil disobedience is a controversial topic‚ one that sparks much debate. On one hand‚ one could argue that protesting or actively disobeying a law one sees as unjust threatens the legal system and‚ in turn‚ negatively impacts society. However‚ history has shown that‚ in cases of unjust laws‚ civil disobedience provides the pressure that pushes open the door to change. A free society is based on the ideals of equal rights and opportunities for all. People are inherently flawed‚ and

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    Civil Disobedience is a method that the United States uses to correct the issues that would exist such as racial inequality‚ unbalanced business organization‚ immoral values‚ and et cetera. This method is a peaceful value since it requires no violence and revolution. This is a positive way of correcting any free society on this Earth. As a means of establishing equality‚ Rosa Parks had refused to give up her her seat to those of white skin color during a time when African-Americans were supposed

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    Thoreau’s "Civil Disobedience" Major Themes Civil Government and Higher Law. In Civil Disobedience‚ Thoreau’s basic premise is that a higher law than civil law demands the obedience of the individual. Human law and government are subordinate. In cases where the two are at odds with one another‚ the individual must follow his conscience and‚ if necessary‚ disregard human law. Thoreau prepared his lecture and essay on resistance to civil government in response to a specific event—the Mexican War

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    the founding of the United States‚ the founding fathers feared a government that would become too authoritarian. To contrast this‚ they allowed the right to protest in the First Amendment. However‚ protesting usually does not do enough. Often‚ civil disobedience is necessary to provoke conversation about sometimes immoral societal norms. Many examples include Edward Snowden‚ Chelsea Manning‚ Rosa Parks‚ and others. Each of them has been a controversial figure in their time‚ but each has brought the

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    Gandhi‚ Martin Luther King Junior‚ Rosa Parks‚ Cesar Chavez. Each of these people were leaders and role models to different civil rights movements. However‚ they all share similar views on how society should react to oppression. The motive behind each and every protest in American History is civil disobedience‚ an idea thought up by Thoreau while he spent the night in jail‚ due to tax evasion. He believed “that government is best which governs least.”1 His revolutionary idea weaved its way into the

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    Thoreau’s Ideas About “Civil Disobedience” Outdated Today? “Civil disobedience” is an intentional and non-violent disobedience of law by an individual who believes that a certain law is unjust and who is willing to accept the penalty for breaking that law to bring about change and public awareness. When Henry David Thoreau wrote “On The Duty of Civil Disobedience” in 1849‚ he advocated that democracy in America could only be improved by individual activism and civil disobedience to unjust laws. Thoreau’s

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