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8. \an unjust law is no law at all.\ what do you think king means? 9. \…

Question

8.
\an unjust law is no law at all.\
what do you think king means?

9.
\one has not only a legal but a moral responsibility to obey just laws.\
what do you think king means?

10.
\one who breaks an unjust law must do so openly, lovingly, and with a willingness to accept the penalty.\
what do you think king means?

reflection
which quote do you think is the most powerful? explain why.

Explanation:

Response
Question 8
Brief Explanations

King (likely MLK) implies laws must align with morality/justice. Unjust laws, violating human dignity/equality, lack legitimate authority. So, people aren’t bound by them as "law" in a true, moral sense.

Brief Explanations

Just laws (fair, equitable, upholding rights) deserve obedience beyond legal duty—there’s a moral obligation. Obeying them supports justice, social good, and aligns with ethical principles, so it’s both a legal and moral responsibility.

Brief Explanations

Breaking unjust laws should be non - violent, public, and with acceptance of penalty. "Openly" shows no deceit, "lovingly" (non - hate - filled, for justice) and accepting penalty demonstrates sincerity, willingness to suffer for a just cause, distinguishing it from criminality.

Answer:

King means that a law lacking justice (e.g., discriminatory, oppressive) does not fulfill the true purpose of law (to uphold morality, equality, human rights). Such a law has no real claim to be followed, as it fails to meet the ethical standards that define a valid, binding law.

Question 9