Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Do you agree or disagree with Thoreau's opinion on civil disobedience?

In 1849, Thoreau, a Transcendentalist writer in Concord, Massachusetts, wrote the essay "Civil Disobedience" (first published as "Resistance to Civil Government") about the right of people to resist following laws they considered unjust. Thoreau had served one night in prison in 1846 for refusing to pay the poll tax to protest American involvement in the Mexican War. He and other abolitionists thought the war was a means of expanding American slavery. He wrote of this time:


"I have paid no poll-tax for six years. I was put into a jail once on this account, for one night; and, as I stood considering the walls of solid stone, two or three feet thick, the door of wood and iron, a foot thick, and the iron grating which strained the light, I could not help being struck with the foolishness of that institution which treated me as if I were mere flesh and blood and bones, to be locked up. I wondered that it should have concluded at length that this was the best use it could put me to, and had never thought to avail itself of my services in some way."



Thoreau's means of protest was peaceful, and he found it ironic that the country should imprison him for following his conscience. He asked, "Can there not be a government in which majorities do not virtually decide right and wrong, but conscience? — in which majorities decide only those questions to which the rule of expediency is applicable?" In other words, Thoreau envisioned a government in which the majorities only decide issues that need to be taken care of, such as road building, but in which larger issues are left to individual conscience. 


When he wrote this essay, he and others were outraged by the Compromise of 1850, which concluded the Mexican War. One of the terms of the compromise was a new and more forceful Fugitive Slave Law, which required northerners to return escaped slaves to the south and hence to the horrors of slavery. Thoreau felt that slavery was a great evil and that people had to resist it.


When considering whether or not to agree with Thoreau, the reader must decide which issues are important enough to provoke resistance to government laws. In addition, the reader must decide how to protest these laws. Thoreau's means of resistance were peaceful. Thoreau's peaceful resistance inspired later civil rights leaders, such as Gandhi in India and Martin Luther King, Jr. in the United States. 

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