History
History, 01.02.2021 02:40, boo3972

Civil Disobedience Part 1
Most people remember Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as reformers who practiced non-
violent forms of protest and advocacy. Both effectively changed the popular opinion about
emotional issues for their countries and brought in a wave of change that a was long overdue. But
the practice of non-violent protest, or civil disobedience, started long before either Gandhi or King.
It began with a quiet, shy poet who is best known for writing a lot about a pond.
Henry David Thoreau lived from 1817
until 1862, mainly in the area of Concord, Massachusetts. The
issue that would tear the country apart in the 1860s had already begun dividing the nation. Thoreau
was only 14 when Nat Turner led the slave rebellion in Virginia and was later hanged. In his late 20s,
Thoreau began speaking against slavery in public, echoing the voices of freedmen like Frederick
Douglass and Lewis Hayden.
Thoreau believed that a government that supported slavery was corrupt and immoral. He was also
deeply suspicious of government. For these and other reasons, Thoreau refused to pay his poll tax
for a number of years. The poll tax was a legal tax owed by every It person. It was basically a tax on
one's body. After not paying for years, he was at last arrested. He spent only one night in jail,
a however, as a relative paid the tax for him. He was reportedly furious that any tax was paid on his
behalf.
It was this experience that Thoreau wrote about in an essay called "Civil Disobedience." In
this essay,
he argued that being moral and just came before allegiance to government. He wrote "If the machine
of government is of such a nature that it requires you
to be the agent of injustice to another, then, I
say, break the law." He also felt that voting was not enough to ensure that
the right thing be done.
He wrote that "even voting for the right is doing nothing for it... A wise man will
not leave the right
to the mercy of chance..." He felt that one had a moral responsibility to resist unjust laws.
What is the main idea of
the bolded paragraph? (5 points)

answer
Answers: 3

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Civil Disobedience Part 1
Most people remember Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as refo...

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