jennyfromdabloc
coked up sociopath
I know what the libertarians will say, so this is a question for those that believe the democratic nation state is legitimate.
Obviously people dismiss situations like Nazi Germany on the basis that laws made by a dictatorship are illegitimate, but modern democracies have made some pretty obscene laws over the years, this being one of the worst examples: Japanese American internment - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
So at what point is it morally acceptable, or even laudable to break a law made by a "legitimate" democratic government? Here are some scenarios to consider:
1. All people from a particular race are rounded up into internment camps. Is it okay to help them hide from the government?
2. A certain word is banned. Should you refrain from using it even in your own home. Should you encourage your children not to use it to promote respect for the law.
3. What if the law makes sense but the punishment is excessively draconian, i.e. the death penalty for petty theft. Would you be justified in helping a thief evade capture or even tampering with evidence?
4. When homosexuality was illegal in Australia, was it immoral for homosexuals to break this law? Would it be wrong for the police to deliberately turn a blind eye to this law breaking, as they often did?
If it is sometimes okay to break the law, and we must use our judgment in deciding when to follow the law, how can the law be said to be inherently legitimate just because it was made by a democratic government?
If you agree it is okay to break the law sometimes, then you admit that we have rights as individuals even if they are not granted to us by law or the constitution, and that the law is subordinate to those individuals rights.
Obviously people dismiss situations like Nazi Germany on the basis that laws made by a dictatorship are illegitimate, but modern democracies have made some pretty obscene laws over the years, this being one of the worst examples: Japanese American internment - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
So at what point is it morally acceptable, or even laudable to break a law made by a "legitimate" democratic government? Here are some scenarios to consider:
1. All people from a particular race are rounded up into internment camps. Is it okay to help them hide from the government?
2. A certain word is banned. Should you refrain from using it even in your own home. Should you encourage your children not to use it to promote respect for the law.
3. What if the law makes sense but the punishment is excessively draconian, i.e. the death penalty for petty theft. Would you be justified in helping a thief evade capture or even tampering with evidence?
4. When homosexuality was illegal in Australia, was it immoral for homosexuals to break this law? Would it be wrong for the police to deliberately turn a blind eye to this law breaking, as they often did?
If it is sometimes okay to break the law, and we must use our judgment in deciding when to follow the law, how can the law be said to be inherently legitimate just because it was made by a democratic government?
If you agree it is okay to break the law sometimes, then you admit that we have rights as individuals even if they are not granted to us by law or the constitution, and that the law is subordinate to those individuals rights.