This week we’ve been discussing arguments for and against civil disobedience, from Socrates to Martin Luther King.
Socrates is held to be “one of the classic spokespersons for opposing civil disobedience” because he did not feel that there was any justification for violating the law. As a citizen of the Athenian state, he believed that he had “entered into an implied contract” which required that he obey the commands of the State. This did not mean that Socrates agreed with everything commanded by the state (including his death sentence), but when he failed to convince his fellow citizens of his arguments, he felt compelled to accept his fate. To escape execution would have meant a loss of integrity.
Interestingly, Martin Luther King invoked Socrates as he argued for civil disobedience in his “Letter from Birmingham Jail”. Martin Luther King compares Socrates’ need “to create a tension in the mind so that individuals could rise from the bondage of myths and half-truths…” through his dialectic method to methods that King and others employed as “non-violent gadflies”. King’s civil disobedience techniques, including sit-ins and marches, were meant to create “…the kind of tension in society that will help men rise from the dark depths of prejudice and racism to the majestic heights of understanding and brotherhood."
I agree with St. Augustine, Gandhi and Martin Luther King, that some laws are unjust and should not be obeyed. We’ve seen it with the racist Jim Crow laws in our own country, Nazi Germany, the racist caste system instituted in South Africa and we’re also seeing it today as gay couples are denied the basic right to marry in most states and the legal protections that right affords. I heard many stories growing up from older family members about the discrimination they endured because of the color of their skin. All of these struggles against injustice have been long and difficult.
I went searching for the exact quote made by Frederick Douglass during the era of slavery that points to the need for civil disobedience to me: “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them..."
I believe that there are clearly times when nothing will change by having discussions, or pleading for change. Sometimes you have to do something dramatic that brings the issue to the forefront, particularly when no other methods have worked. I think the Occupy Wall Street movement comes out of the frustration of seeing a succession of politicians elected and no discernible change, of seeing the scales of justice in the legal system weighed in favor of the powerful. I’ve heard some pundits say that the OWS people are just wasting their time, that they failed to do anything real, but one thing is for sure, the debate has changed. For the first time in a long time, people and the media are talking about the injustice of the favoritism toward the very rich and the increasing gap between the haves and have-nots.