Civil disobedience has been an integral part of every movement within the US that has significantly altered history. One might even make the claim that civil disobedience is an imperative part of any movement. Nonviolent civil disobedience was a trade mark of the civil rights movements. African-American students sat at lunch counters illegally. They suffered an onslaught of physical assault by some of the white patrons. They also suffered arrest and being jailed. Why? To fight injustice. To create a place where I can go to any restaurant I want. Their tactics involved breaking the law. The very laws, they were breaking denied their humanity.
The idea that African-Americans were the 3/5ths of a human was etched into the nation's law. Japanese people were falsely imprisoned lawfully. Native American's were slaughtered lawfully. Domestic Violence was legal. The idea that what is right is legal goes against basic morality and the course of history. Our nation has a history of committing atrocities like genocide, slavery, theft of land, etc legally. The fact that it was the law of the land doesn't take away from the immorality of the actions. The laws were legislated evil.
To promote the idea that people should simply follow all laws (even immoral ones) is ignorant. It erases the fact that the freedom I, an African-American, enjoy was attained through breaking the law. The freedoms my friends of color and women enjoy were attained by breaking the law. To claim that one should blindly follow the law even immoral or amoral law is to deny the very importance of civil disobedience and its part in nearly every significant social movement from civil rights to the worker's movement to suffrage. We enjoy an unprecedented amount of freedom in the US because they dared to break the law. The question is are we going to live up to their hopes and dreams. Am I going to be the hope and dream of a slave? Are you going to be a hope and dream of those who broke the law to allow our freedom? Or will you stand in the box that's been given to you and yell at those who dare to leave theirs?
The idea that African-Americans were the 3/5ths of a human was etched into the nation's law. Japanese people were falsely imprisoned lawfully. Native American's were slaughtered lawfully. Domestic Violence was legal. The idea that what is right is legal goes against basic morality and the course of history. Our nation has a history of committing atrocities like genocide, slavery, theft of land, etc legally. The fact that it was the law of the land doesn't take away from the immorality of the actions. The laws were legislated evil.
To promote the idea that people should simply follow all laws (even immoral ones) is ignorant. It erases the fact that the freedom I, an African-American, enjoy was attained through breaking the law. The freedoms my friends of color and women enjoy were attained by breaking the law. To claim that one should blindly follow the law even immoral or amoral law is to deny the very importance of civil disobedience and its part in nearly every significant social movement from civil rights to the worker's movement to suffrage. We enjoy an unprecedented amount of freedom in the US because they dared to break the law. The question is are we going to live up to their hopes and dreams. Am I going to be the hope and dream of a slave? Are you going to be a hope and dream of those who broke the law to allow our freedom? Or will you stand in the box that's been given to you and yell at those who dare to leave theirs?