Civil Rights And Disobedience
By acting civil but disobedient
you are able to protest things you don’t think
are fair, non-violently. Henry
David Thoreau is one of the most important
literary figures of the nineteenth
century. Thoreau’s essay "Civil
Disobedience," which was written as a
speech, has been used by many great
thinkers such as Martin Luther King Jr.
and Mahatma Ghandi as a map to fight
against injustice. Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. was a pastor that headed the Civil
Rights movement. He was a
gifted speaker and a powerful writer whose philosophy
was non-violent but
direct action. Dr.King’s strategy was to have sit-ins,
boycotts, and marches.
Dr. King’s "Letter from Birmingham Jail" was based
on the principles of
Thoreau’s "Civil Disobedience". Both Martin Luther
King Jr. and Henry
David Thoreau are exceptional persuasive writers. Even though
both writers
are writing on ways to be civil but disobedient, they have opposite
ways of
convicing you. Dr. King is religious, gentle and apologetic, focusing
on
whats good for the group; while Thoreau is very aggressive and assertive
for his
own personal hate against the government. Both Martin Luther King Jr.
and Henry
David Thoreau have the same ideas, but view them differently.
Dr. King wants to
ultimately raise awareness and open doors for the better of
a group. Thoreau
wants more individual rights for people. Dr. King is
explaining his view of
conscience: I submit that an individual who breaks a
law that conscience tells
him is unjust, and willingly accepts the penalty by
staying in jail to arouse
the conscience of the community over its injustice,
is in reality expressing the
very highest respect for the law (Martin Luther
King, p. 521). This quote shows
Dr. King’s opinion on going to jail. King
knows that he was unjustly put into
jail. He accepts going to jail even
though he was put in jail wrongly. The
community then knows of the injustice
and should pressure the government. The
other thing that happens is King is
respecting the law by obeying it. He is a
peaceful man and wants justice, but
believes in following the rules peacefully
to get the job done. Thoreau feels
that conscience plays a more personal role.
Can there not be a government
in which majorities do not virtually decide right
and wrong, but
conscience?... Must the citizen ever for a moment, or in the
least degree,
resign his conscience to the legislator? Why has every man a
conscience,
then. I think that we should be men first, and subject afterward
(Henry David
Thoreau, p.581). Thoreau is questioning why majorities make the
rules. He is
questioning democracy. He’s telling us to question anything we do
and why we
should give into the government if we do not agree with a rule. Why
should we
be individuals with brains and have thoughts of our own if we are not
allowed
to think for ourselves and do what we want? If we believe we are free,
why do
we have so many rules? Thoreau believes we should be real to ourselves
and
live for ourselves, not the government. King wants to change the laws
because
they are morally wrong and Thoreau wants to change the law because
he
personally doesn’t like it. Henry David Thoreau and Martin Luther King
both
agree injustice exists. Thoreau thinks of injustice as friction or
tension that
can wear the machine down. King thinks that injustice just
exists and tension
must be created with direct action to negotiate with the
machine. Thoreau
explians, If the injustice is part of the necessary friction
of the machine of
government, let it go, let it go: perchance it will wear
smooth,- certainly that
machine will wear out..., but if it is of such a
nature that it requires you to
be the agent of injustice to another , then, I
say, break the law. Let your life
be a counter friction to stop the machine.
(Henry David Thoreau, p.587).
Injustice is a cause of friction, which is
brought on by the government. The
government has created something that is
working against itself; if the friction
of the injustice is left alone it
will continue to grind down the machine. Once
again Thoreau questions if you
can wait that long and what are you personally
going to do about the
injustice. Thoreau says use your life to stop the machine.
Dr. King
explains, " injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We
are
caught in an inescapable network of mutuality tied in a single garment
of
destiny. Whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly" (King
p.516).
If we allow injustice to affect any one place the government
knows they can get
away with it. If people don’t fight injustice the
government will continue to
allow it because they know they can get away with
it. We are all tied together
in a mutual destiny; we are all in the same
boat, what ever affects you affects
me. How can you sit and watch injustice
happen, we are all connected; what
injustice happens to me happens to you.
Both Thoreau and King are trying to
prove the point that we are our brother’s
keeper. We all need to fight
injustice to save each other. Thoreau and King
have said what role conscience
plays for them and that injustice exists but
you must use your conscience to
decide what to do. Now they discuss just and
unjust laws. Thoreau explains,
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. ( Henry David Thoreau, p.586)
Thoreau is acknowledging that unjust laws
exist. I think he figured like the
sun rises every morning there will be unjust
laws. How you deal with them if
you do not approve of them is the question.
Thoreau asks, will you be
happy to just obey the law for as long as it takes to
change the law by the
government’s rules?Do you want immediate acton? If you
follow the
government’s rules it will take a very long time to appeal the
unjust law in
court and they still may not change the law. Can you wait that
long?Or,
should you take drastic direct action to be heard at once. Are you
willing to
be arrested? Can you handle the responsibility for your actions, or
are you
scared. Thoreau is impleying that you should not wine about something
inless
you are ready and able to take the conciquinces. Dr. King explains how
he
justifies breaking some laws and following others; the fact is there are
simply
two types of laws. Dr. King explains there are, just and unjust laws,
One has
not only a legal, but moral responsibility to obey just laws.
Conversely, one
has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws. A just law
is a man-made code
that squares with the moral law or the law of God. An
unjust law is a code that
is out of harmony with the moral law. To put it in
the terms of Saint Thomas
Aguinas, and unjust law is a human law that is
not rooted in eternal and natural
law. Any law that uplifts human personality
is just. Any law that degrades human
personality is unjust. ( Dr. King
p.519-520). King is saying that just laws
should be obeyed because they are
the law and they are morally right. Morally
right is being or acting in
accordance with established standards of good
behavior. So, if a law is legal
and good you should fallow it. People should not
follow unjust laws because
they are wrong; you owe it to yourself morally. A
just law is one that God
would O.K; God is all loving, blind to any indifference
and will forgive. The
constitution says that all men are created equeal; so
therefore if the law is
not the same to everyone, it is not a just law. If
anyone is dehumanized it
is an unjust law. Plain and simple, an unjust law makes
you feel bad about
who or what you are . A just law should make you feel equal
and proud to be a
human being. While Thoreau focuses on what you might do about
a law, Dr. King
focuses on what makes a law just or unjust. Thoreau knows there
are unjust
laws; I believe he thinks as long as laws exist there will always be
the
possibility of being unjust laws. Thoreau says yes, unjust laws exist
but
what are you going to do, just sit there or fight. Dr. King is trying to
get in
to the heads of his fellow clergyman that unjust laws are morally
wrong. But
they both want to get the point across that you must do something
to change
unjust laws because they are wrong and can take your God given
freedom away.
Even though both writers are writing on ways to be civil
but disobedient, they
have opposite ways of convincing you. Their concepts
are similar but their
approaches are totally opposite. Dr. King’s religious
and moderate tone are
totally different from Thoreau’s intense hatred for
authority, mostly the
government. They both want to point a finger at the
government. Thoreau believes
the best government is one which governs the
least. Dr. King believes the
principles of government are necessary to keep
order, but need to live up to
"All men are created equal." The underlying
meaning that I got from reading
both essays was that you should follow your
heart and your conscience against
injustice and unjust laws, no matter what
approach you choose to take.
Bibliography
"Letter from Birmingham
Jail" - Martin Luther King "Civil
Disobedience" - by Thoreau