The document discusses the concept of civil disobedience, emphasizing that obedience to unjust laws leads to moral corruption and societal injustice. It highlights historical figures like Thoreau, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King Jr. as champions of individual conscience over blind obedience to authority. The text argues that true heroes are those who resist unjust orders and act according to their moral beliefs, despite facing condemnation from society.
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Disobedience
The document discusses the concept of civil disobedience, emphasizing that obedience to unjust laws leads to moral corruption and societal injustice. It highlights historical figures like Thoreau, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King Jr. as champions of individual conscience over blind obedience to authority. The text argues that true heroes are those who resist unjust orders and act according to their moral beliefs, despite facing condemnation from society.
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Disobedience
just: fair, good, correct and fair
by means of: because of well-disposed: people with good thoughts (with good hearts) Publish Date: December 3, 2006 agents: actors, doers injustice: unfairness, wrongness, badness, evil undue: too much, not necessary a file of: a line of soldiers: fighters, army people “Law never made men more just; and, by means of their respect for colonel, captain, privates: ranks (levels) of people in the army it, even the well-disposed are daily made the agents of injustice. A admirable: should be admired; wor- common and natural result of an undue respect for law is, that you thy, good may see a file of soldiers, colonel, captain, privates and all, against their wills: not by choice; marching in admirable order over hills to the wars, against their against what they want to do common sense: what most think is wills, indeed, against their common sense and consciences. They correct and right have no doubt that it is a damnable business in which they are con- conscience: feeling of what is right cerned; they are all peaceably inclined. Now, what are they? Men and wrong; moral feeling damnable: horrible, terrible, wrong at all? Or small movable forts, at the service of some unscrupulous inclined: what someone usually man in power? does or thinks (usually peaceful) forts: an army building, a base The mass of men serve the State thus, not as men mainly, but as unscrupulous: without morals; with- out goodness machines, with their bodies. They are the standing army. In most the mass of men: most men cases there is no free exercise whatever of the judgment or of the the State: the country, the nation moral sense; but they put themselves on a level with wood and earth standing army: permanent army and stones; and wooden men can perhaps be manufactured that will exercise: use (noun) the judgement: ability to make deci- serve the purpose as well. Such people command no more respect sions than men of straw, or a lump of dirt. They have the same sort of the moral sense: ability to decide worth only as horses and dogs. Yet such as these are commonly what is right and wrong considered good citizens.” manufactured: made, created command: demand, require straw: hay -- Henry David Thoreau (Civil Disobedience) lump: small round piece considered: thought to be Many of the abominable problems in the world are the result of obe- abominable: horrible, terrible obedience: doing what someone dience. In our personal lives, in the media, we cry and moan and else tells you to do blame "our leaders" for the problems of the world. We shift responsi- the media: newspaper, TV, etc... bility to them. But are they solely responsible? What about the thou- moan: make a sad sound blame: criticize sands and millions who are actually carrying out their orders? shift: move; change These people are the ones actually doing the terrible things that their solely: only leaders want done. These people have abandoned their conscience carrying out their orders: doing and have abandoned their responsibility. what they say to do abandoned: left; got rid of dutifully obeying: doing what other Can such people be considered adult human beings at all; or are they people say-- because of duty still children, or dogs-- dutifully obeying their master-parent? soldiers: fighters in an army trigger: part of a gun that you pull Think of the American soldiers currently in Iraq. In the end, it is not (in order to shoot) torturing: hurting (someone who George Bush who is pulling the trigger or dropping the bombs or tor- is helpless or powerless) turing the prisoners. He merely gives the orders- orders which no orders: commands particular man or woman must follow. For while they might be dis- particular: individual charged or put in prison for refusing an order, no one will be hurt or discharged: fired (from the army) killed for doing so. refusing: saying no (to an order/command) disobey: not do something that Isn't Thoreau correct? Aren't our true heroes the ones who disobey you are told to do unjust laws? Aren't the true heroes the ones who follow their con- unjust: not fair, not good, not science? Here in America, it is our rebels who are our historical moral heroes- those who refused to support injustice: Martin Luther King, follow their conscience: do what you think is right/good/moral the heroes of the American revolution, John Brown, Malcolm X, Susan rebels: those who fight against B. Anthony, Vietnam War resistors.... authority/power resistors: people who resist, peo- In the present, such people are always condemned. They are ple who don’t obey attacked, called unpatriotic, imprisoned, and vilified. Yet history is condemned: criticized, blamed, said to be guilty, accused usually kind to such people, and harsh to the unjust. In the 1950s, unpatriotic: not loving your coun- Martin Luther King was vilified as a radical. Today, he is celebrated try, not loyal to your country as a hero, while the authorities he resisted are now viewed as the imprisoned: put in jail, put in worst kind of scum. prison vilified: described as a bad per- son, described as a terrible or evil Thoreau, and later Gandhi and Martin Luther King, all believed that person individual conscience was more just and powerful than law. All three harsh: tough, not kind, not gentle encouraged people to break unjust laws; and to instead have a radical: someone who fights for respect for what is good, right, true, and just. Though all three men big changes; someone who fights are now dead, their message is as important today as it was during the government celebrated as: praised as their lifetime. the authorities: the government; those with power “Thoreau was a great writer, philosopher, poet, and a most practical scum: low class people, criminals, man, that is, he taught nothing he was not prepared to practice in bad person/people himself. He was one of the greatest and most moral men America has to break unjust laws: to disobey bad laws produced.” lifetime: time a person lives; time when a person is alive --Mohandas Gandhi