Law-Breaking as Protest Essay

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    Media framing and movement protest: The case of American Indian protest study shows the dysfunctions of media attention. The power of the media to shape social events is a fact beyond dispute. Since the invention of the printing press competing groups have vied for the control and support of those agents and technologies responsible for the distribution of information. The data collected for this study are evening news segments produced and aired by the National Broadcasting Company (NBC)…

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    On page 76, during the protest, the people involved chanted the words, “Guns may shoot and knives may carve, but we won’t wear your silly scarves!” The demonstrators refused to obey the government’s strict rule of wearing the veil, and since they did not allow the people to have a voice, it resulted in these ongoing, public protests. Since the government did not allow the people to make their own choices during the time, they…

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    Injustice Injustice is an issue constantly seen throughout history and continues to occur in modern day society. The beings who establish these injustices in the law, have remained in power, but now it is up to the citizens to create a change that succeeds, and influences those to come. Many people stood for the idea of what makes a law just and unjust, including the most familiar like Martin Luther King and Thoreau. These men obtained similar ideas of moral right in a society and how to…

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    Boston Tea Party On the evening of December 16th, 1773, Sam Adams and the Sons of Liberty boarded ships in the Boston Harbor. Later that night they would dump over 300 chests of tea into the water beneath them. Their goal was to protest the tax on tea, “No taxation without representation.” This major historic event is thought to have caused the American Revolution which started in 1775. The Boston Tea Party was important because it was the first major act of defiance by American colonists.…

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    Charlottesville Speech

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    opinions, but when you resort to violence to silence and condemn others for their beliefs that is going way too far. Many people hide behind the right to free speech, but there is a fine line between what is protected under free speech and what is breaking the law. Nobody has a right to impede on the rights of others just because they have opposing viewpoints. The events that took place in Charlottesville were absolutely appalling and there is no excuse for behaving that way. James Alex Fields,…

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    arrested for a protest of racial injustice in 1963 (Maranzani). After the protest several white members of the southern clergy wrote a letter condemning Dr. King (Maranzani). They stated he was an extremist who broke several laws and just needed to wait for the rights to come legally (Maranzani). The letter was King’s response to their allegations. Dr. King used metaphors in his Letter from Birmingham Jail. In his letter King says, “I had hoped that the white moderate would understand that law…

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    need to be in agreement with the law before it can be completed (Yan, Park, Ravits and Sidner, 2017). Since the signing of executive order, protesting about the pipeline has been an ongoing event. The main protester against the Dakota Pipeline is a tribe known as the Standing Rock Sioux (Yan, Park, Ravits and Sidner, 2017). Their key concern is the pipeline being tunneled under Lake Oahe, which is a section…

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    Kent State Shooting Essay

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    of control event because of the protests of May 1-4, the casualties, the accusations about the gunfire, and media. A campus rally broke out in Kent, Ohio at Kent State University protesting the war. Many people were angered by the news that the US would be sending troops to fight in Cambodia (Filo, 2006). They saw no good in sending men into an out of country war. Some of who were angered included college students studying at Kent State. The beginning of the protests began where many other…

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    multiple instances throughout history have shown that fighting and even ending oppression is possible, but it is important to recognize that some methods work better than others. Practicing civil disobedience, or refusing to comply with certain laws to peacefully protest, is the most effective way to fight oppression. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Letter From Birmingham Jail, the…

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    Particularly disobedience when it comes to unjust laws. This is contradictory due to the nature of King’s work and mission in creating peace and unity amongst black and white individuals. In Letter from Birmingham Jail, he states, “I would be the first to advocate obeying just laws. One has not only a legal but a moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws” (King, 85). In King’s eyes, an unjust law is any law that is degrading towards…

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