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Henry David Thoreau: Condemning Civil Disobedience

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Condemning Civil Disobedience
Recurringly, civil disobedience is an abstract idea revolutionaries made to combat unjust legislature. Unjust legislature should be dealt with accordingly, but civil disobedience is not that way. Natural rights as a citizen should not doubt preserved, but when it comes to subduing unjust law, sometimes the best option is to just let it persist. Doing nothing is better than disorganizing your country through civil disobedience.
Civil disobedience is the nonviolent protesting of oppressed or unjustly treated groups, usually resulting in unlawful acts. These acts are driven by passion, pain, and desire to reform the government. But in reality, is civil disobedience the correct approach to having your voice heard? Thoreau stands to civil disobedience saying, “ Unjust laws exist: shall we be content to obey them, or shall we endeavor to amend them, and obey them until we have succeeded, or shall we transgress them at once?” [Thoreau, Paragraph 16]. The acts are claimed to be moral and to benefit the public, however, these limelight “martyrs” are radicals in reality. Going against the law in any shape or form is unpatriotic and when one might say the government themselves go against the law themselves, sadly that is not your place to take action against. Checks and balances are upheld to make sure unjust or …show more content…
Radicalists sought a change, though through the unlawful approach. Just because a protest is peaceful does not mean its participants cannot be harmed. Many have died participating in hunger strikes, whilst they do produce changes, life is too precious to throw away for the cause. Unjust laws will always exist, repeating the same revolution over and over will learn to be dealt with. Putting an end to civil disobedience builds the character of an obedient

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