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    Civil Disobedience: An Act Which Citizens have the Moral Obligation to Complete Laws are created in order to protect and keep the common good in society. However‚ what if a person finds a law unjust; should they obey the law anyways or should they ignore it because they feel it goes against the common good? If a law is unjust‚ the people in that society should have the moral obligation to disobey the law. Of course‚ there are limitations as what is deemed unjust. A person cannot go against the law

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    the world: civil disobedience. It was the concept that people could disobey laws and accept their consequences to protest in peace. It may sound counter-intuitive‚ but it drew attention to some of the greatest plights in human history: civil rights for African Americans‚ Indian oppression by the British Empire‚ South African apartheid‚ among many other events. Each of them succeeded in changing the world by fighting with their words‚ their wills‚ and their intellect. Civil disobedience allows people

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    What were the aims and methods of the Civil Rights Movement and how successful were they in achieving their aims by 1964? The civil rights movement was a political‚ legal and social struggle by Black Americans to gain full citizenship rights and to achieve racial equality. After the eminent speech by Martin Luther King (in the early 1950’s) African American men and women‚ along with the whites‚ organised and led the movement at national and local levels. They organised events such as non-violent

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    Thoreau -- Civil Disobedience Historians‚ philosophers‚ and authors have spent decades contemplating the relation between government and citizens. Though the question sparks many thought s‚ it is rarely met with sufficient answers. However‚ a theorist known as Henry Thoreau has offered many works that have shown deep insight on viewing man as an individual instead of a subject‚ through analyzing the ways citizens should live out their lives. Thoreau ‘s most famous work Civil Disobedience expresses

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    highly influential for many years. Perhaps the most famous of these ideas were those presented in Civil Disobedience. Within this text‚ Thoreau presents highly unconventional ideas for his time. These ideas‚ however‚ lead to many of the ideals held by Americans today. In Civil Disobedience‚ Thoreau presents the ideals and attitudes embodied by so many American citizens today. In Civil Disobedience‚ Thoreau expresses a need for resistance of authority. Thoreau genuinely believes that if one does

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    have arisen as a means to try to create change. Peaceful protest is not a new concept‚ even in America. Henry David Thoreau‚ a Transcendentalist writer in the 19th century‚ refused to pay taxes because he did not support the Mexican War. In Civil Disobedience‚ Thoreau claims that so many men today blindly follow the government’s wishes and that “in most cases there is no free exercise whatever of the judgment or of the moral sense.” Peaceful protest is a way for men to “be men first‚ and subjects

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    of communities based on race‚ sex‚ age‚ and status (whether economically or politically) that leads to forms of rebellion to fight against the hierarchy in order to close a gap in society as a result. Mohandas Gandhi explained in his “On Civil Disobedience essay‚ “No country has ever become‚ or will ever become‚ happy through victory in war...it only falls further...either our act or our purpose was ill-conceived‚ it brings disaster to both belligerents.” (Gandhi‚ 1916) Instead of using war‚ he used

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    Intro Civil disobedience is the active‚ professed refusal to obey certain laws‚ demands‚ and commands of a government‚ or of an occupying international power. Civil disobedience is commonly‚ though not always‚[1][2] defined as being nonviolent resistance. It is one form of civil resistance. In one view (in India‚ known as ahimsa or satyagraha) it could be said that it iscompassion in the form of respectful disagreement. The Civil Disobedience Movement led by M K Gandhi‚ in the year 1930 was an

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    history of civil disobediencmovement. The Gandhian concept of civil disobedience and satyagraha is the greatest contributionto mankind in our times. Albert Einstein said‚ “It is my belief that the problem of bringing peaceto the world on a supranational basis will be solved only by employing Gandhi’s method on alarge scale.” Martin Luther King Jr. said‚ “From my background I gained my regulating Christianideals‚ from Gandhi‚ I learned my operational technique.”Gandhi called his concept of civil disobedience

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    Society would not have ever evolved the way it has without brave acts of civil disobedience by selfless individuals we have had as members of American society. To think that women would not have the right to vote‚ African Americans would still be discriminated against‚ or homosexuals would not have the chance to be married is crazy. All these things were changed by complex acts of civil disobedience that carried our country to value equality and personal liberties. That is why I think that peaceful

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