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Thoreau Critique Of Civil Disobedience

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Civil Disobedience - Student Charged in Airline Box Cutter Scare Henry David Thoreau defines civil disobedience as the act of going against the laws of which the government has set in place in order to help challenge unjust laws. Thoreau, while supposedly put away in prison, decided to write an essay detailing his thoughts on civil disobedience. In the essay, Thoreau describes that the government is inefficient and slow when it comes to repealing laws and making important decisions. Thoreau believes that the people of America are better and faster at making these decisions. He claims that the government doesn’t have our best interests at heart; they make their own spontaneous decisions regardless of what the majority wants. The government works on their own accord and disregards the majority that built the country from the ground up. Thoreau writes “Witness the present Mexican/American war, the work of comparatively a few individuals using the standing government as their tool; for, in the outset, the people would not have consented to this measure” (Thoreau 9). This passage tells us that the government is stealing income from Americans to help fund the Mexican War. Thoreau says that the American government is using their citizen’s money to help fund an evil and immoral battle that should’ve never even happened in the first place. Thoreau writes that there are a lot of Americans who think the same way as him in that they do not agree with the Mexican war. They believe

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