Peaceful disobedience had been a key point within the civil rights era, famous examples include Rosa Parks not giving her spot to a white man on the bus, MLK standing up with his fellow supporters for protesting racial discrimination. Their actions gained a national spotlight through the eyes of the masses, especially when the harsh actions of our civil servants (the police) were highlighted through spraying citizens with fire-hoses, beating them with batons, kicking people, etcetera. This spotlight had led a revolution to the end of Jim Crow laws and discrimination all together through ratifying (previous) laws.
We as humans living in the 21st century see the laws which existed before the 1970’s discriminatory, but certain people didn’t have that mindset and seen laws as though they couldn’t have flaws within. That said - are we as humans living within 2017 going to view all laws which exist now as perfect? According to many, history repeats itself.
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We as a people within the United States have the opportunity to change and update certain laws or provisions in which we find unfit (if we do so). Freedom of speech is the soul foundation which structures the people the right to petition, question authority, and (yes of course) laws which politicians pass
If it wasn’t for our right to freedom of speech we as a citizenry wouldn’t be having this discussion of questioning authority. Which is my case for defending peaceful resistance. If it wasn’t for the movement of Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, the Black Panther movement and many others; Jim Crow laws would still be in existence today. The integrity of a person to have the audacity to break an existing law for their own beliefs can have the possibility to spark a movement, one in which can change those specific laws people are
Jim Crow Laws The Jim crow laws are laws that makes it so that the white and the blacks are separate from each other. One reason why i know it keeps the blacks and the whites separate is because in the springboard book on pg. 179 it says “ the schools for the white children and the negro children shall be conducted separately”.
Most slaves lived on enormous plantations that stretched all the way across the South. Field slaves were slaves that la-bored in a little group controlled by what was called a slave driver, who was usually another slave worker. Women usually worked as cooks, maids, and nurses for both the master’s and mistress’s children. Slaves were very well known for being skilled workers, working as carpenters, blacksmiths, and coopers. The younger female slaves generally worked as babysitters for the smaller infants or just helped with small chores around the house.
Our disobedience enstils the passion our contemporary society continues to have for what we feel is just. Peaceful resistance to unjust laws benefits a free society by giving the American people a voice in government. History and contemporary media has proven that protesting our governmental ideals is a strong and powerful means of changing the government. Martin Luther King Jr. protested the horrendous treatment of African-Americans in the 1960s by bringing people together in order to end racial segregation in the United States. King included in his Letter From Birmingham Jail that "an unjust law is a human law that is not rooted in eternal law and natural law.”
THE YEAR IS 2009. Citizens of the United States enjoy freedom, privileges, and for many, an opportunity to participate in the “American dream.” BUT, approximately 40 years ago this was not true for African Americans living in the South. I reside in Columbia, South Carolina, and today as I sit and watch people – Black people, White people, - people of all races -walk with their lawn chairs, blankets, and coolers, sit, and enjoy a family summer concert at Finlay Park, I can’t help but wonder, how many people know of the struggle?
Background and race america, to begin with, a person having origins in any of the original people of North and South america , race and ethnicity standards are determined by the U.S of management and budget, the united states has a racially diverse population slavery, jim crow laws , was named of the racial caste system Many strategies were used to fight for civil rights and success and failures were experienced along the way to achieving their goals So some of the Strategies they used , jim crow laws, by 1838 became a priority expression meaning “nigro” when southern legislatures passed laws of racial segregation directed against blacks , legal cases and achieving a goal like fighting for civil rights and experienced there failures along
The consequences of peaceful protesting is, the marchers from Selma to Montgomery, had to go back and march three times. The first march didn 't work out and got sent back to the bridge. The second march was when they were crossing the bridge, the police officers attacked them with stick, teargas, clubs, arrested innocent people, guns were fired, knocked people to the ground, whips, rubber tubing wrapped in barbed wire was a weapon that the police officers whipped at the marchers. The third time they went to march, they won Federal Protection and they successfully marched for their cause. The National Guard helped them on the last march.
The Jim Crow Laws were sadly an unbelieve event that took place in the 1800’s of American history. These laws targeted African American males, giving literary test and asking unreasonable questions about the U.S.A that many white males couldn't even answer, to many not able to read nor write causing many black males “unable” to vote. The Crow Laws also made segregation legal such as, white and black only schools and movie theaters. White schools, movie theaters, and etc,.. where far better than the African American builds which were often run down or poorly funded. You may think to yourself that it was so far back that in today's culture, those laws do not have any effect anymore, However you might be wrong.
The Jim Crow Era is considered by historians to be one of the darkest moments in American history. Following the Reconstruction era, many African Americans assumed that with the passing of the 14th Amendment and the abolishment of slavery, that they would live free lives as free Americans. Unfortunately, this was not the case. The Jim Crow Era was an era full of legalized segregation, lynch mobs, and white supremacy. These factors arose from the actions of white southerners who viewed African Americans as a “threat” to their manhood.
The civil disobedience is a strategi that was used to drive attention to a certain problem. It means breaking an unjust law intentionnally to try to change it but the most important point is the willingness to accept the punishment. The civil disobedience can be violent or nonviolent, so Do you think that peaceful resistance to law can impact a free society?or not? Peaceful resistance has proved over time that it works, it indeed impact a free society.
The consequences of peaceful protesting is, the marchers from Selma to Montgomery, had to go back and march three times. The first march wasn 't what they wanted to achieve and got sent back to the bridge. The second march was when they were crossing the bridge. The police officers attacked them with stick, teargas, clubs, arrested innocent people, guns were fired, knocked people to the ground, whips, rubber tubing wrapped in barbed wire was a weapon that the police officers whipped at the marchers. The third time they went to march, they won Federal Protection and they successfully marched for their cause.
Civil Disobedience Does peaceful resistance to laws positively or negatively impact a free society? Many people in today’s world question this; however, the United States wouldn’t be what it is now if people didn’t honorably protest. Respectable rallying has a positive effect on a free society because without it, there wouldn’t be anything free about society. It would be unheard of to even write an essay on such a controversial topic without someone first fighting for the right to speak one’s mind. Peaceful resistance has many accounts of having a positive effect on society.
I believe that peaceful resistance to a law negatively affects the free society of today. In the past, however, the peaceful resistances fought for equal rights in the workplace, politics and society. Today, peaceful protests against laws and political decisions negatively affect the society such as the election and inauguration of President Trump and many of his executive decisions sparked protests and social media speculations impacted society negatively. During the civil rights era, peaceful protests such as the Birmingham Campaign and the March on Washington, where Martin Luther King Jr. gave his "I have a dream" speech were positive.
Herbert J. Storing, an Associate Professor of Political Science, in “The Case Against Civil Disobedience,” writes, “One of the practical consequences of this institution [civil disobedience] is to divert disobedience and even revolution into the channel of law” (97). What Storing is saying is that civil disobedience will encourage people to break the laws and they will hide under civil disobedience to avoid the law. Also, civil disobedience might split society by creating disagreements with the people, and it could create a political instability. However, Storing fails to see that those who break an unjust law, as discussed above, do not avoid the law, in fact they show respect to the law as they willingly accept the consequences. By accepting the consequences, they show that they are not acting for their own interests but for society’s.
Hopefully, people in the future will only use civil disobedience as a way to harmlessly, but powerfully, stand up for their beliefs and fight for a
Peaceful Resistance no matter what way you look at it, it 's still going against someone whether it involves words or actions, resistance still causes more conflict. The last 5 years we have had people say they want change through these “peaceful protest” but these peaceful protests have done nothing but turn to violent riots were theirs damage to vehicles, business families rely on destroyed, bystanders hurt, officers killed and our country torn apart. Back when Martian Luther King Jr was around and he had his Peaceful Resistance or rallies for equality, they were peaceful and brought our country together with something that needed to be changed, but the protest we’ve had the last 5 years… he would be ashamed of. Peaceful Resistance to laws does negatively impact our free society in America. First going along with what I said about there being “peaceful rallies” even though some people may be at these rallies to make a difference to support their opinion, not everyone can respect that.