Justification for Law-Breaking Essay

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    John Brown Hero

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    United States was built on the principles of freedom and natural rights. As stated in the essay, Obedience and Disobedience, “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are the ends” (Zinn). Any group that denies people these rights has the legal justification to overthrown, which was what John Brown was trying…

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    Paranoia In The Crucible

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    Although the hysteria of the Salem Witch Trials seems ironic in comparison to the rightous, law-abiding, and seemingly level-headed demeanor of the Puritan society, the Puritans justify the hysteria through the fear and conformity among themselves and for their neighbors. For instance, Abigail reminds Salem of the mistrust, " I have been hurt…

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    Punishment as defined by J.M. Pollock is an excruciating or unlikable practice imposed upon a person in response to a violation of a rule or law by an individual or individuals who has the legal authority to do so (Pollock, 2014). Nearly everyone would have the same opinion that causing harm to someone or subjecting them to some form of pain is just wrong and immoral. Nevertheless, punishment by definition, engages inflicting pain as a punishment as being necessarily poles apart from inflicting…

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    With gun control debates emerging as a major topic in the past election and currently in our communities, it is imperative to distinguish the justification for the allowance of guns to remain apart of our society. Michael Huemer and Daniel Demetriou both suggest that individuals have a prima facie right to own a gun and that prohibition of such would violate the right to self defense. Both Huemer an Demetriou offer their own respective conclusions without citing the second amendment. Offering…

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    Bonjour's Criticism

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    priori beliefs. These include: beliefs about the unobserved past, beliefs about unobserved situations in the present, beliefs about the future and beliefs in the laws of nature (BonJour, 102). BonJour holds that these intuitive examples provide a powerful prima facie argument for the existence of a priori…

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    well. The purpose of this paper is to examine the death penalty in the United States including ways to carry out and arguments to abolish, the costs involved, and possible alternatives. “In 1972, the Supreme Court declared that under then-existing laws ‘the imposition and carrying out of the death penalty… constitutes cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.’ (Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238),” (source). In 1976, the United States Supreme Court…

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    American criminal justice system enforces our laws and keeps watch over us but who is watching over the system? Oversight over the system may after all, be less than optimal going by various criminal cases tainted by prosecutorial misconduct resulting in wrongful convictions. From law enforcement, the elected officials, the court system, to corrections, prosecutorial misconduct gained notoriety because of the absolute immunity they enjoy. According to Silverglate, (2000), “We now live in a time…

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    Racial Profiling

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    bring effective improvement in the United States’ law enforcement. This enforcement needs to recognize the faults in arresting more African American individuals than Caucasian individuals. There has been racial tension for copious years in the past. Racial profiling does not correspond to the US Constitution and laws set in place. Statistics show American’s disapproval of racial profiling in law enforcement and in general atmosphere.…

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    an organization with such little regard for human life? Many came to the conclusion that all federal funding of Planned Parenthood should cease because American citizens don’t want to be funding the organization, the group is constantly skirting the law, and the services provided are immoral and unacceptable. The opposition would say that without federal funding, Planned Parenthood could not continue to provide life saving health care for women nation wide. However, if Planned Parenthood was…

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    the candidate B through an anonymous email server. Candidate B then believes that whoever is sending these emails is hurting her campaign. Does candidate B have any right to request the identity of the anonymous email? Is candidate A actually breaking any laws here? Let’s examine this case under the ethic worldviews of Kantianism, Utilitarianism, Social Contract Theory and Virtue Ethics. The first thing that needs to be determined…

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