Introduction
Civil disobedience is defined as a situation in which people take to the streets or act in violation of the law so as to review an issue by the public and the political class. Proponents of the use of civil disobedience say that such minor crimes including blocking roads and occupying public spaces are acceptable if the quest is to resolve an issue of greater magnitude. Serious issues that may call for civil disobedience if the political class does not heed public opinion include war or damaging the environment extensively. The act of civil disobedience involves some form of breach of either the normal practice or the law. It involves infiltration of secret spaces and disruption of the public order. Consequently, the action of civil disobedience is commonly treated as trespass (Brownlee). According to Henry David Thoreau, in his Civil Disobedience, such disobedience as refusing to stand when the American national Anthem is being sung in public sporting events is desirable. The intention of this essay is to demonstrate that civil disobedience is a way of expressing one’s convictions, through comparing Thoreau’s thoughts with Kaepernick’s actions of resistance.
Background
Colin Kaepernick, a quarterback player with 49ers of San Francisco opted to kneel as the national anthem was underway prior to the commencement of the NFL games. His action represented a peaceful way of protesting how America is treating members of the black community (Rosenberg). His protest action influenced others in other sports. It triggered a conversation at national level and attracted the president’s anger. His action marked the end of his football career.
In contrast, Thoreau advocates for picking up arms is much like the stands that Dr. King and Parks would assume. According to Thoreau, every person owes it to themselves and fellow citizens not to simply follow their governments like a flag in the wind. If people have reason to believe that the laws being applied are not just, then they must rise up by whichever means available and protest to repeal such laws. Thoreau never liked slavery; even though it was supported by the state. So it is also not surprising that he held such sentiments (Thoreau).
Comparison
In analyzing Thoreau’s thinking, it is apparent that one must prioritize their conscience over state laws. Thoreau’s work provides a sharp criticism of the American institutions and the policies that they apply; particularly on the issue of slavery, and the war with Mexico....
Works cited
Biddle, David. Colin Kaepernick and Non-violent Civil Disobedience. The Coffeelicious, 2016. Web.
Brownlee, Kimberley, "Civil Disobedience", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2017 Edition). Web.
ROSENBERG, MICHAEL. Colin Kaepernick Is Recipient of 2017 Sports Illustrated Muhammad Ali Legacy Award. Sports Illustrated, 2017. Web.
Thoreau, Henry David. Civil disobedience. Broadview Press, 2016. Print.
Victor, Daniel. Obama Says Colin Kaepernick Is ‘Exercising His Constitutional Right.’ The New York Times, 2016. Web.
Civil Disobedience Thoreau's Disobedience Thoreau's essay on civil disobedience not only gives a startlingly strong argument against paying one's taxes (which is in itself a difficult task), it also gives a subtle but clear image of Thoreau himself. In this essay, the reader discovers a writer who is at once romantic and cynical, idealistically self-sacrificing and fiercely self-centered, areligious and mystical. It would be tempting to portray Thoreau as inconsistent or somehow
Civil Disobedience The Trial of Socrates The Athenians suffered a crushing defeat in 404 B.C.E. with the end of the Peloponnesian War. A Spartan occupation force controlled the city, and instituted the rule of the Thirty Tyrants to replace Athenian democracy. While a form of democracy was reinstated it lacked the acceptance of ideas and freedom of speech that had been such an integral part of Athenian society (Rogers). In Athens at this
John Locke's social theory not only permits disobedience but also a revolution if the State violates its side of the contract. Martin Luther King, Jr. says that civil disobedience derives from the natural law tradition in that an unjust law is not a law but a perversion of it. He, therefore, sees consenting to obey laws as not extending or including unjust laws. At present, a new and different form
Civil Disobedience: Thoreau's research on civil disobedience puts it as the refusal by the citizens to obey laws or even pay taxes in a country. The end result of the disobedience is normally war, especially when the citizens want to take laws into their hands. The decision by citizens to take the law into their hands forces the government to act forcefully, which results in the war. However, when proper procedures
Regardless, to condemn Brown to death in Thoreau's view demoted the far greater human destruction of life via the institution of enslavement Brown attempted to end. This does not seem so much to be a contradiction or a defense of violence but a tempering of the anger that Brown created in the hearts of many Americans, and an attempt to put the violent acts of Brown in the context
Pharisaical practices are as popular today as they may be supposed to have been in the time of Christ -- and one of the biggest hypocrisies of our time is what Roosevelt called "the great arsenal of democracy," the shield-phrase with which the U.S. would pursue its policy of "manifest destiny" all over the globe (and an ideology it had been pursuing since the end of the 19th century when
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now