Novice Packet
Novice Packet
Introduction:
This packet is intended to provide a starting-off point for novice Lincoln-Douglas
debaters on the Minnesota September-October resolution:
The evidence included is not lined-down and the cases are meant to serve only as
examples of how arguments can be framed around the topic. The MDTA encourages
you to use this packet to get your students up and debating as quickly and easily as
possible. Of course, however, this packet is just a starting place and there are many
arguments and pieces of evidence beyond those included below.
Table of Contents
Introduction: ..............................................................................................................1
Affirmative Case: ........................................................................................................2
Affirmative Evidence: ..................................................................................................5
Legitimate and Illegitimate Laws .......................................................................................................................5
The Dangers of Majority Rule ..............................................................................................................................7
Civil Disobedience is a right .................................................................................................................................7
Civil Disobedience Works .....................................................................................................................................9
Negative Case: .......................................................................................................... 12
Negative Evidence: ................................................................................................... 14
The importance of law and social order....................................................................................................... 14
The importance of majority rule ..................................................................................................................... 15
Civil Disobedience is harmful and immoral ................................................................................................ 16
Alternatives to Civil Disobedience.................................................................................................................. 19
                                                                                                                                                             1
Affirmative Case:
I affirm the resolution: Civil disobedience in a democracy is morally justified.
Professor Berel Lang defines Civil Disobedience as meeting the following criteria:
       “(1) the act will involve violation of a law;
       (2) the act will be performed intentionally, part of the intention being to effect change in
       the law violated or in a related law or policy;
       (3) the Person will make generally known their responsibility for the act and be
       willing to accept the punishment fixed by law for it.” 2
Ethics consultant and philosophy Ph.D. Chris MacDonald defines morally justified as:
        a course of action is justified if there are better reasons in favor of it than
        there are against it. Preferably, these reasons should be ones that other people could agree are good ones. It is this sense of justification that is
        important for morality. Moral justification, then, means showing that there are more or
better moral reasons weighing for a course of action than against it.3
The value is MORALITY. The resolution fundamentally asks us to weigh the moral
reasons in favor of civil disobedience against the moral reasons counseling against it.
Therefore morality is the end-goal of the resolution. It is important to note here that given
the definition of morally justified, the resolution is comparative. In other words, simply
providing one example or set of examples where civil disobedience would not be justified
is not sufficient to negate the resolution. Rather, both sides have a burden to prove their
position as a general rule.
The standard is rights protection. People come together to form democracies in order to
ensure that their rights are protected. Democracies are only acting morally, then, when
rights are protected. All impacts must link back to citizens’ rights.
                                                                                                                                                           2
          “Within the liberal-democratic tradition, civil disobedience can be considered as
          a fundamental part of the right to rebel against unfair laws and tyrannical
          government. It is possible to argue that civil disobedience, as a dimension of the right to
          rebel constitutes a fundamental human right. Even more, I would like to argue that The right to
          rebel is not simply another human right, but the most important human right we have. In fact,
          without acknowledging the existence of a right to rebel, the very idea of
          human rights ceases to make any sense. We need to remember that the dominant discourse of human rights emerged
          out of the mass rebellions of the American and French Revolutions. Within modern society, it was the exercise of the right to
          rebel that opened the possibility for us to contemplate today the very notion of
          human rights. The right to rebel underwrites and creates the foundation for every human right to exist, its full exercise therefore
          becoming the only effective avenue of political defiance when those rights are
          under attack by conservative forces.” 4
Tiedenbrun explains that civil disobedience is a prerequisite to all other human rights,
because without the ability to protect and defend ones self against unfairness by the
government, human rights as a whole cease to exist. Simply put, without civil
disobedience, our rights would be useless, and governments could potentially be as
tyrannical and unfair as they wish. Because of this, civil disobedience is an appropriate
weapon in the fight for justice, since the protection of our rights is paramount in the
achievement of justice for all.
      decision makers to learn about their misconduct from outside sources. Because of
      constraints, those who engage in civil disobedience contest illicit acts of the regime,
      not the regime's 1egitimacy. If a positive response ensues, a third, possible effect of civil
      disobedience may be the regime’s correction of abuses through executive,
      legislative, or judicial action5
Not only is civil disobedience a fundamental right but it is also an effective way to show
a government the flaws within its systems. These flaws can range from an unwanted war
to the oppression of an entire race. Because of the monstrous effects these flaws may
have the citizens play an important role in preventing their occurrence.
Contention three: Civil disobedience has brought about successful and useful changes
throughout history. Kayla Starr explains,
4
 Susan Tiefenbrun, Associate Professor Of Law At Thomas Jefferson School Of Law In San
Diego, California, 2003
“Article: Civil Disobedience And The U.S. Constitution.” Southwestern University Law Review.
32 Sw. U. L. Rev. 677
5
 Civil Disobedience as Functional Opposition Paul F. Power The Journal of Politics, Vol. 34, No. 1. (Feb.,
1972), pp. 37-55
                                                                                                                                           3
        “Throughout the history of the U.S., civil disobedience has played a
        significant role in many of the social reforms that we all take for granted
        today. Some of the most well known of these are:
                   1) The Boston Tea Party -- citizens of the colony of Massachusetts trespassed on a British ship and threw its cargo (tea
                   from England) overboard, rather than be forced to pay taxes without representation to Britain. This was one of the many acts of civil disobedience
                   leading to the War for Independence, establishing the United States of America as a sovereign state.
                   2) Anti-war movements have been a part of U.S. history since Thoreau went to jail for refusing to participate in the
                   U.S. war against Mexico, in 1849. More recent examples were the nationwide protests
                   against the war in Viet Nam, U.S. involvement in Nicaragua and
                   Central America, and the Gulf War. Actions have included refusal to pay for war, refusal to enlist in the
                   military, occupation of draft centers, sit-ins, blockades, peace camps, and refusal to allow military recruiters on high school and college campuses.
                   3) The Women's Suffrage Movement lasted from 1848 until 1920, when thousands of courageous women
                   marched in the streets, endured hunger strikes, and submitted to arrest and jail in order to gain the right to vote.
                   4) [The] Abolition of slavery -- including Harriet Tubman's underground railway, giving sanctuary, and other actions
                   which helped to end slavery.
                   5) The introduction of labor laws and unions. Sit-down strikes organized by the IWW, and CIO
                   free speech confrontations led to the eradication of child labor and improved working conditions, established the 40-hour work week and improved
                   job security and benefits.
                   6) The Civil Rights Movement, led by Martin Luther King, Jr. and others, included sit-ins and illegal marches
                   which weakened segregation in the south.
                   7) The Anti-Nuclear Movement, stimulated by people like Karen Silkwood and the Three Mile Island nuclear
                   power accident, organized citizens throughout the country into direct action affinity groups, with consensus decision making and Gandhian
                   nonviolence as its core. Massive acts of civil disobedience took place at nuclear power facilities across the country, followed by worldwide protests
                   against first-strike nuclear weapons, occupying military bases, maintaining peace camps, interfering with manufacture and transport of nuclear bombs
                   and devices, marching, sitting in, blockading and otherwise disrupting business as usual at nuclear sites.
                   8) [and] Environmental and forest demonstrations, with acts of civil disobedience such as sit
                   ins, blockades, tree sits and forest occupations, have emerged in the last decade, prompted by the continuing mass clear cuts and destruction of the
                   forest ecosystem and widespread environmental consequences.
        In all of these struggles, citizens had reached the conclusion that the legal means for addressing their concerns had not worked.
        They had tried petitioning, lobbying, writing letters, going to court, voting for
        candidates that represented their interests, legal protest, and still their views
        were ignored.”6
Thus, they resorted to civil disobedience, which brought about real results in the fight for
justice. Without civil disobedience, none of these demonstrations and changes could have
possibly occurred.
Because of these reasons, civil disobedience is not only an appropriate weapon in the
fight for justice, but a necessary one. As such, I urge an affirmative ballot.
6
 Kayla Starr, Civil Disobedience Activist, Summer 1998 “The Role of Civil Disobedience in Democracy.”
The Civil Liberties Monitoring Project. Online.
                                                                                                                                                                           4
Affirmative Evidence:
       Law is the foundational mechanism of social interaction and the reflection of how
       a society organizes itself. A legal system will be “good,” “just,” “fair,” or
       “workable” only if it structures societal relations and resolves disputes well
       enough to earn the respect and adherence of the public and, thereby, to prevent
       societal collapse. Throughout history, and across legal systems, theorists have
       employed similar, functional meta-principles as criteria by which to measure how
       well law accomplishes these tasks. These criteria, which I term “legal-system
       values,” are that law be predictable, replicable, vertically coherent across time,
       horizontally coherent across related areas of law, responsive to societal needs and
       values, responsive to changes in society and in societal values, influential in
       fostering individual and societal growth and shaping values or morals, and fair
       and just in individual cases.
       Finally, society expects the law to produce results that are fair and just in
       individual cases. For purposes of this discussion, "fairness" is defined primarily
       by procedural standards such as notice and due process. A procedural view of
       fairness emphasizes that, if the law's consequences are known and the laws are
       applied neutrally, persons affected can take steps to avoid violating the law. Thus,
       the “no dogs” statute is fair if it is applied without bias to anyone bringing a dog
       into the park. Procedural fairness may not, however, ensure substantive "justice,"
       which, for purposes of this discussion, focuses on consequences. The distinction
       between fairness and justice is particularly important if the law or legal processes
       themselves might be biased or non-neutral in operation. This is, of course, one
       issue raised by critical legal scholars, who do not trust procedure to work in a fair
       and unbiased fashion to achieve substantive justice.
       Objection: We must obey the law under a contract with other members of our
       society. We have tacitly consented to the laws by residing in the state and
       enjoying its benefits.
                                                                                           5
       Reply: Obviously this objection can be evaded by anyone who denies the social
       contract theory. But surprisingly many disobedient activists affirm that theory,
       making this an objection they must answer. Socrates makes this objection to Crito
       who is encouraging him to disobey the law by escaping from prison before he is
       executed. Thoreau and Gandhi both reply (as part of larger, more complex replies)
       that those who object deeply to the injustices committed by the state can, and
       should, relinquish the benefits they receive from the state by living a life of
       voluntary simplicity and poverty; this form of sacrifice is in effect to revoke one's
       tacit consent to obey the law. Another of Thoreau's replies is that consent to join a
       society and obey its laws must always be express, and never tacit. But even for
       Locke, whose social contract theory introduces the term "tacit consent," the theory
       permits disobedience, even revolution, if the state breaches its side of the contract.
       A reply from the natural law tradition, used by King, is that an unjust law is not
       even a law, but a perversion of law (Augustine, Aquinas). Hence, consent to obey
       the laws does not extend to unjust laws. A reply made by many Blacks, women,
       and native Americans is that the duty to obey is a matter of degree; if they are not
       fully enfranchised members of American society, then they are not fully bound by
       its laws.
Joseph Raz, Professor of the Philosophy of Law at Colombia Law School, 2003
“About
Morality And The Nature Of Law.” The American Journal of Jurisprudence. 48 Am. J.
Juris. 1
       The fact that the general duty to obey may depend on systemic features of the law
       does not, of course, show that it is compatible with a proper conception of how
       evil the law can be, and of how much injustice and oppression, etc., it may cause.
       It is unlikely that the systemic moral qualities of the law are entirely independent
       of, entirely unaffected by, the moral qualities of the content of the law, that is, of
       the moral content of the laws which constitute it. How are we, then, to assess the
       claim that there is a general obligation to obey?
Howard Zinn, former professor at Boston University, 1968 
“Seven guidelines for civil
disobedience.” Disobedience and Democracy: Nine Fallacies on Law and Order. pp. 119-
122 Online. <http://www.worldpolicy.org/globalrights/usa/1968-Zinn-
civil%20disobedience.html>
       There is no social value to a general obedience to the law, any more than there is
       value to a general disobedience to the law. Obedience to bad laws as a way of
       inculcating some abstract subservience to “the rule of law” can only encourage
       the already strong tendencies of citizens to bow to the power of authority, to
       desist from challenging the status quo. To exalt the rule of law as an absolute is
       the mark of totalitarianism, and it is possible to have an atmosphere of
       totalitarianism in a society which has many of the attributes of democracy. To
       urge the right of citizens to disobey unjust laws, and the duty of citizens to
       disobey dangerous laws, is of the very essence of democracy, which assumes that
       government and its laws are not sacred, but are instruments, serving certain ends:
                                                                                            6
       life, liberty, happiness. The instruments are dispensable. The ends are not.
Elias Berg, Democracy and the Majority Principle: A Study in Twelve Contemporary
Political Theories, 1965, p. 27-28.
       It is true that the use of the majority principle implies a formal right to express a
       preference on the issues to be decided; to that extent, it implies the legitimacy of
       opposition. Yet as we have seen above, majority decisions may be regarded as
       ipso facto 'right' and thereby, once they have been made, as sacrosanct and
       exempt from criticism. The use of the majority principle is therefore compatible
       with a majority dictatorship in which the minority's formal right of opposition is
       only of temporary duration. Moreover, even if all the citizens have the right to
       criticize as well as to take part in the making of decisions, some citizens may be
       permanently in the minority and may be constantly overruled by a majority
       refusing to make any concessions to their demands; the use of the majority
       principle does not necessarily preclude majority tyranny." as harmless and
       permissible or be regarded as obstructive and thereby as illegitimate.
Kayla Starr, Civil Disobedience Activist, Summer 1998 “The Role of Civil Disobedience
in Democracy.” The Civil Liberties Monitoring Project. Online.
                                                                                               7
       cooperation with good." Non- cooperation is not intended as a hostile act against
       police officers and jail guards. An understood theoretical basis is that nonviolent
       protest draws its strength from open confrontation and non- cooperation, i.e., civil
       disobedience. We retain as much power as we refuse to relinquish to the
       government. Non-cooperation is a form of resistance that is used to reaffirm our
       position that we are not criminals and that we are taking positive steps toward
       freeing the world of oppression and environmental suicide.
John Rawls, “Civil Disobedience” in Philosophy of Law, edited by Joel Feinberg and
Hyman Gross (1991), p. 117 (a reprint from the original publication in A Theory of
Justice by John Rawls, 1971).
        In a democratic society, then, it is recognized that each citizen is responsible for
                                                                                               8
       his interpretation of the principles of justice and for his conduct in light of them.
       There can be no legal or socially approved rendering of these principles that we
       are always morally bound to accept, not even when it is given by a supreme court
       or legislature.
       Civil disobedience breaks laws but it also makes laws. Non-violent actions have
       been at the heart of many of the great social and environmental advances in
       modern historical times, from freedom of speech to women’s right to vote. For the
       Greens peaceful, constructive protest is seen as crucial to bringing about social
       change. So we welcome any opportunity to discuss the history and philosophy of
       civil disobedience.
                                                                                           9
       effective than the bland discourse of official multiculturalism. Woomera 2002
       highlights what is, at least for me, the most important dimensions of civil
       disobedience. Civil disobedience opens the possibility for the “enacted utopia” of
       the anti-statist and anti-capitalist public sphere. Following Slavoj Zizek, it is
       possible to argue that civil disobedience is the radical political act where a world
       inclusive of many worlds is not simply a distant promise, but the suspension of
       the oppressive temporality of the existing social order through which the
       possibility of that new world manifests itself in the actual moment of civil
       disobedience.
Joseph Raz, Professor of the Philosophy of Law at Colombia Law School, 2003
“About
Morality And The Nature Of Law.” The American Journal of Jurisprudence. 48 Am. J.
Juris. 1
       The second rejoinder, that the conditions of the government being just or
       democratic do not suffice to establish an obligation to obey, is more plausible.
       The problem is that being just, or being democratic, when they are systemic
       properties of the law, are consistent with individual laws being unjust, or
       pointless, or oppressive. The question is: is there an obligation to obey such a law,
       for if there is not there is no obligation to obey the law generally. One answer, and
       obviously there are many others which I will just have to ignore here, is that it is
       necessary to support a just institution, a just government and legal system. This is
       again an empirical question, and I believe that there is plenty of evidence that the
       better argument is different. Just governments and legal systems, generally
       speaking, work better with less than perfect compliance. This statement should
       not be misread. I do not mean that a few murders are better than none. I mean that
       there are many laws regarding which occasional breach by their subjects, and the
       occasional turning of a blind eye by the authorities make them achieve their goals
       with fewer injustices, and less friction with resisting populations. Besides, though
       here one's sense of justice may cloud one's impressionistic empirical judgment, a
       population ready to defy pointless, unjust and oppressive laws does more to
       preserve the just character of governments and their laws than a docile population
       willing to eat whatever it is dished out.
       Here the logic of civil disobedience is not simply about breaking the law, but
       breaking the law in order to make the antagonisms that exist obscured and hidden
       within our society visible. When demonstrators blockaded the ACM offices last
       year and denied people entry to it, they were not about promoting violence but
       signifying in both a physical and symbolic way the violence of incarceration
       suffered by thousands of refugees in Australia; it was about bringing for a brief
                                                                                         10
       moment the reality of the detention camps to the “respectable” space of Sydney’s
       CBD. Moreover, acts of civil disobedience like this become real schools of
       political science. By making social antagonism visible, people not only learn
       about their ability and power to work together and enact change collectively, but
       also about the role of the media, the police and government in managing or
       suppressing dissent.
       But there is good reason to consider...the ability to provide laws and policies
       which commend themselves to the reflective judgment of citizens. It is, perhaps,
       the breakdown of authority in this...sense that has made disobedience to law seem
       plausible in our time.
       The fact that authority can fail in these respects is...good reason to provide to
       provide suitable procedural safeguards: not just to safeguard the judgment and
       conscience of the individual in matters of substance, but also to safeguard
       democratic authority itself.
       Jefferson's "spirit of resistance" refers to both the right of revolution and the right
       of civil disobedience. Non-violent resistance is a compromise, a way to safely
       vent emotion about unjust laws, a middle ground between blind obedience to
       tyrannical rulers or unjust laws and outright revolution. n5 Before the American
       Revolution, the founding fathers reasoned that resistance to unlawful acts could
       not be deemed per se "illegal," but they also understood that resistance and
       revolution were not legally available to them within the judicial procedure for
       redress of grievances set up by the British government. n6 Even after the
       Revolution, the spirit of resistance continued and was particularly noticeable in
       Massachusetts, where throughout the l780s citizens organized committees and
       conventions to protest high taxes and to urge reform of the state constitution. n7
       When the committees failed, the people turned to mob action and actually closed
       down the state courts in the famous Shays' Rebellion of l786 -87. n8
                                                                                            11
Negative Case:
I negate the resolution, resolved; “In a democracy, civil disobedience is an appropriate
weapon in the fight for justice.”
The value is MORALITY. The resolution fundamentally asks us to weigh the moral
reasons in favor of civil disobedience against the moral reasons counseling against it.
Therefore morality is the end-goal of the resolution. It is important to note here that given
the definition of morally justified, the resolution is comparative. In other words, simply
providing one example or set of examples where civil disobedience would be justified is
not sufficient to affirm the resolution. Rather, both sides have a burden to prove their
position as a general rule.
Second,
This articulates the key problem with civil disobedience. Every law may look just or
unjust to different perspectives however civil disobedience would allow any person to act
against any law they didn’t like, regardless of majority consent or legal means. This
opens the society as a whole up for anarchy as laws become devoid of meaning and laws
are broken meaninglessly.
Contention one: civil disobedience can support legitimate and illegitimate causes. The
action “civil disobedience” has no inherent moral quality because it can yield both good
and bad results. Similarly “driving” can be both just and unjust, on one hand you can
drive someone to the hospital and on the other hand you can hit the person with your car
so they have to go to the hospital. Thus, while there may be legitimate outcomes of civil
disobedience we must also look at what else it would justify. It would justify any citizen
acting out against any law they felt needed change. The inherent repercussions could
7
    (Cohen, Carl, Civil Disobedience, Tactics and the Law. 1971, Columbia University Press: NY. Pgs: 5-6)
                                                                                                         12
involve murder, riots, terrorism and more. Because civil disobedience always violates
the rights of citizens who have come together to agree upon laws, it always harms rights.
However, civil disobedience does not necessarily guarantee rights as it is often just a tool
for people to circumvent the democratic process. Indeed, civil disobedience hinders
rather than helps the fight for justice. Leon Jaworski in the Morality and the Law, 1988,
p. 87 elaborates
        One of the most appalling and frightening of the trends in recent years is the
        self-serving practice of choosing which laws or court orders to obey and
        which to defy. The preachments that generate this attitude are cancerously
        dangerous to our system of government under law. To rest upon or hide
        behind the claim that if one’s conscience speaks to the contrary, justification
        exists for ignoring laws or decrees are but to say that the rule of law is not to
        be the governing yardstick of our society’s conduct. It is dangerous to allow
        people to choose the laws they obey and there is no way to judge whether or
        not that law is unjust.8
Contention three: there are more legitimate avenues than civil disobedience. Susan
Tiefenbrun explains
       The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution guarantees us the right to
       dissent, to protest, to assemble peaceably, to criticize a law or government,
       and to oppose a law. The more difficult question is how one may permissibly dissent if a person's first legal and moral imperative is to obey
       the law. Using means of opposition and dissent that are permissible under the U.S. system of law will not subject a dissenter to punishment by the state. The
       right to dissent may be exercised by the use of written and spoken words, by
       acts or conduct such as picketing, "peaceable" mass assembly, sit-ins and
       demonstrations, which are referred to as "symbolic speech." The basic
       means of permissible protest under the U.S. system is the right to vote, "the right to
             organize and to elect new officials to enact and administer the law." 9
And the list goes on, lobbying, writing letters, going through the courts, etc. can all
achieve the desired ends of changing a law without the negative harms of civil
disobedience. Each is different from civil disobedience in one key way; they don’t
require breaking the law to change it.
Thus, because Civil disobedience can support clearly unjust things, because there are
alternatives that legally and legitimately achieve the desired ends, and because Civil
disobedience twists and destroys the democratic process, I urge a negative ballot.
8
  Leon Jaworski, “The United States Faces Today A Serious Threat to Her Continued Existence as a
Free People” in Morality and the Law, edited by Robert M. Baird and Stuart E. Rosenbaum (1988)
p. 87 (reprint originally published in the Baylor Line, January-February 1968: 14-18).
, Associate Professor Of Law At Thomas Jefferson School Of Law In San
Diego, California, 2003; “Article: Civil Disobedience And The U.S. Constitution.” Southwestern
University Law Review. 32 Sw. U. L. Rev. 677
9
    “Civil Disobedience and the U.S. constitution”, 2003, found online.
                                                                                                                                                                13
Negative Evidence:
Noel B. Reynolds, “Grounding the Rule of Law,” Ratio Juris, v. 2, no. 1, March 1989, p.
5.
       There is much opposition to civil disobedience. For the past two thousand years,
       philosophers have asked themselves whether one has an obligation to obey a law
       that is unjust. Scholars have grounded an obligation to obey unjust laws in six
       different legal theories. These [*694] include the duty to obey the law out of
       gratitude to an existing legal system (i.e. Socrates and Plato's Crito); the duty to
       obey the law because of the individual's contractual agreement or consent to obey
       (i.e. John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau); the duty to obey because of the
       negative consequences of disobedience; the duty to obey out of fairness; the duty
       to obey in order to support just institutions (i.e. H.L.A. Hart and John Rawl's
       theory), and the duty to obey in order to support your community (i.e. Ronald
       Dworkin's theory).
                                                                                             14
       essence of law that it is equally applied to all, that it binds all alike, irrespective of
       personal motive. For this reason, one who contemplates civil disobedience out of
       moral conviction should not be surprised and must not be bitter if a criminal
       conviction ensues ... organized society cannot endure on any other basis. n139
Willmoore Kendall, Univ. of Dallas, John Locke and the Doctrine of Majority Ru le,
1965, p. 108.
       Here are a group of people united together in order to enjoy the benefits of just
       and reasonable government. A difference arises amongst them as to what is just
       and reasonable, and investigation reveals that the opposing factions consist of one
       individual, on the one side, and the remainder of the community, on the other
       side. Does either have a right to impose its view of what is just and reasonable
       upon the other? Can either judge impartially in what is, by definition, its own
       cause? Locke's theory of popular sovereignty obliges him to answer the second
       question in the affirmative, and the first with the words, Yes, the rest of the
       community has such a right. And, since the only difference between the two (the
       community minus one of its members, and the individual) which leaps to the eye
       is that the one is many individuals and the latter is only one, he is obliged to say
       that numbers guarantee impartiality.
                                                                                              15
Willmoore Kendall, Univ. of Dallas, John Locke and the Doctrine of Majority Rule,
1965, p. 112.
       Wherever men live in community with one another, he is saying, the relations
       between them can be described in terms of an agreement which, in addition to
       assigning to the whole community that unlimited power which we have examined
       in the preceding section, assigns to its numerical majority a right to make
       decisions (regarding the use of that power) which are binding upon the minority.
       The majority-principle is, in a word, implicit in the logic of community life.
Willmoore Kendall, Univ. of Dallas, John Locke and the Doctrine of Majority Rule,
1965, p. 132.
       Locke can, to be sure, be quoted as saying that 'where the body of the people, or
       any single man, are deprived of their right, or are under the exercise of a power
       without right, ... they have a liberty to appeal to Heaven whenever they judge the
       cause of sufficient moment,' and we have so quoted him. He can be quoted ... as
       saying that the right to judge whether or not to appeal to Heaven is something
       which the individual cannot part with ... But it is in this same passage that he says
       that the principle in question 'operates not till the inconvenience be so great that
       the majority ... find a necessity to have it amended'! And it is only a few pages
       later that he defends the people's (= the majority's) right to revolution in terms of
       the fact that 'the examples of particular injustice or oppression of here and there
       an unfortunate man moves them not.'
       What if everybody did it? Civil disobedience fails Kant's universalizability test.
       Most critics prefer to press this objection as a slippery slope argument; the
       objection then has descriptive and normative versions. In the descriptive version,
       one predicts that the example of dis obedient will be imitated, increasing
       lawlessness and tending toward anarchy. In the normative version, one notes that
       if disobedience is justified for one group whose moral beliefs condemn the law,
       then it is justified for any group similarly situated, which is a recipe for anarchy.
                                                                                          16
       Disobedience is a forceful way of having society do things your way. Even a
       small group of citizens can, with only a little effort, cause great destruction on the
       infrastructure of a country. The problem with this is that a small terror group
       without any mandate from the rest of the population may consider themselves to
       be the righteous ones. Some Anarchists even think that they are acting in the best
       interest of society, even though the people sympathize neither with their ends nor
       their means. These people seem to think that they are somehow superior, and that
       the others don't know their own best. This is a kind of elitist thinking that I cannot
       accept.
Marjorie E. Kornhauser, Professor of Law Tulane Law School, Fall, 2002
 “Legitimacy
And The Right Of Revolution: The Role Of Tax Protests And Anti-Tax Rhetoric In
America.” Buffalo Law Review, 50 Buffalo L. Rev. 819
       After the Revolution, when mobs turned against the newborn American
       government, many American leaders began to question the appropriateness of the
       old "spirit of resistance." At this point in time, resistance clashed with the need for
       a stable, strong government in a new republic. n13 Upon the founding of the
       United States of America as one nation, even the radical Bostonian, Samuel
       Adams, once the most vocal proponent of resistance and revolution, n14 revised
       his views about the right to revolt. n15 He now saw the inherent dangers of too
       much resistance leading to a breakdown of the rule of law in society. n16 James
       Madison, who did not renounce the right of revolution and originally included it
       as one of the rights protected by the Bill of Rights, actually feared revolution. n17
                                                                                           17
       And George Washington, the father of the United States, prayed that God "would
       incline the hearts of the citizens to cultivate a spirit of subordination and
       obedience to government." n18
       In the eighteenth century, the French Revolution and its aftermath convinced
       Americans of the need to limit popular sovereignty in order to avoid the chaos and
       anarchy that consumed [*681] France after its Revolution. Everyone in the United
       States knew that after the French Revolution, France "groaned under the tyranny
       of the mob." n29 In France, government became anarchy, and violence replaced
       law and order. n30 The French drafted, ratified, and then abrogated constitutions
       with alarming frequency. n31 They formed illegal assemblies which usurped the
       powers of existing French legislatures. n32 The Americans looked at France and
       feared that popular sovereignty unbridled in the United States could lead to a
       similar state of chaos. The leaders in the United States sought to establish a
       balance between the right to dissent and the need to maintain a stable government.
       The right to revolution and rebellion became obsolete in this climate, and the right
       to resistance needed careful limitations.
       Professor Jacobs asserts that civil disobedience should not be judged according to
       the traditional free speech model summarized above. n173 Rather, Professor
       Jacobs argues in favor of the adoption of a different "free speech model that
       would include the public value of civil disobedience and the harms it necessarily
       causes." n174 Since civil disobedience is intentional lawbreaking done for the
       purpose of [*700] expression and under circumstances where it is likely to be
       understood, civil disobedience should be viewed as expressive conduct. However,
       since civil disobedience is different from the broad class of "lawbreaking" and
       also different from n175 the other broad class of "expressive conduct," Professor
       Jacobs believes that civil disobedience requires a free speech analysis all on its
       own. Nevertheless, Professor Jacobs realizes that lawbreaking as a protected form
       of expression could lead to anarchy, and, therefore, she reasons that civil
       disobedience cannot be protected under the First Amendment. The United States
       Supreme Court decided in l993 that physical assault cannot be "expressive
       conduct protected by the First Amendment." n176 This decision brings to mind
       the example that one cannot conceive of political assassination as constitutionally
       protected expression. Although Professor Jacobs rightly concludes that civil
       disobedient should be subject to penalty, she argues persuasively that civil
       disobedient should not be subject to enhanced penalties. n177
                                                                                        18
Alternatives to Civil Disobedience
       Judge Robert H. Bork believes that civil disobedience is pure lawlessness, n140
       political anarchy, and "there is no reason for courts to protect any advocacy of law
       violation since that is merely advocacy of a piecemeal overthrow of the
       democratic system. n141 Critics of civil disobedience as a means of legal reform
       remind us that under the U.S. [*696] "system a person is entitled to challenge the
       validity of a law being applied against that person by resisting its enforcement in
       court on a plea of invalidity, and that lawful resistance to law is a cornerstone of
       our liberties." n142 Civil disobedience should only be a last resort after
       negotiation, conciliation, the courts, and Congress have failed. n143
       The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution guarantees us the right to dissent,
       to protest, to assemble peaceably, to criticize a law or government, and to oppose
       a law. n144 The more difficult question is how one may permissibly dissent if a
       person's first legal and moral imperative is to obey the law. Using means of
       opposition and dissent that are permissible under the U.S. system of law will not
       subject a dissenter to punishment by the state. The right to dissent may be
       exercised by the use of written and spoken words, by acts or conduct such as
       picketing, "peaceable" mass assembly, sit-ins n145 and demonstrations, which are
       referred to as "symbolic speech." The basic means of permis sible protest under
       the U.S. system is the right to vote, "the right to organize and to elect new
       officials to enact and administer the law." n146 Burning the American flag has
       been defended as a permissible form of protest and protected as symbolic speech.
       n147 Burning one's draft card was found not to be protected because it interfered
       with the record keeping function of the U.S. government. n148
19