Civil Disobedience: A Threat to Our Society Under Law
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| by Morris I. Leibman |
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This article, which originally appeared in
The Freeman in December 1964, is an adaptation
of Mr. Leibman's address before the American Bar
Association Meeting, Criminal Law Section, in the
summer of that year. As we again face challenges to
our society and its rule of law, his ideas merit a careful
re-examination.
Woodrow Wilson once said: "A nation
which does not remember what it was
yesterday, does not know what it is
today, nor what it is trying to do. We are trying to
do a futile thing if we do not know where we came
from or what we have been about."
In seeking to improve tomorrow, it is our duty
to remember where we have been and reflect on
where we are.
We live in that instant of time when it can be
said that never before have the people in this
country enjoyed so many material goods, however
"imperfect" their distribution. Never before
have we had as much mechanical, electronic, and
scientific equipment with which to subdue the
natural obstacles of the universe. But the multiplication
of consumer wealth is subordinate to
our greatest accomplishment-the fashioning of
the law society [one that operates under the rule
of law].
Never in the history of mankind have so many
lived so freely, so rightfully, so humanely. This
open democratic republic is man's highest achievement
-not only for what it has already accomplished,
but more importantly because it affords
the greatest opportunity for orderly change and
the realization of man's self-renewing aspirations.
Our goals, as set forth in the Declaration, have
been buttressed by a Constitution, a system of
checks and balances, a mechanism judicial, legislative,
and executive which permits the continuation
of Western civilization's spirited dialogue. This
unhampered dialogue makes possible the opportunity
to continuously approximate, through our
legislative and judicial system, our moral and spiritual
goals.
The long history of man is one of pain and suffering,
blood and tears, to create these parameters
for progress. This noble and unique experiment of
ours over a hundred years ago, lived through the
cruelty of a massive civil war to test whether such
a unique system could endure. It did. It has. It will.
Let us always remember that the law society is the
pinnacle of man's struggle to date-the foundation
for his future hope.
There is an obligation to that law society. It was
stated by Abraham Lincoln in these passionate
words: "Let every American, every lover of liberty,
every well-wisher to his posterity swear by the
blood of the Revolution never to violate in the
least particular the laws of the country.... Let
every man remember that to violate the law is to
trample on the blood of his father, and to tear the
charter of his own and his children's liberty. Let
reverence for the laws be breathed by every
American mother to the lisping babe that prattles
on her lap; let it be taught in schools, in seminaries,
and in colleges; let it be written in primers,
spelling books, and in almanacs; let it be preached
from the pulpit, proclaimed in legislative halls
and enforced in courts of justice. And in short, let
it become the political religion of the nation; and
let the old and the young, the rich and the poor,
the grave and the gay of all sexes and tongues and
colors and conditions, sacrifice unceasingly upon
its altars."
No society whether free or tyrannical can give
its citizens the "right" to break the law. There can
be no law to which obedience is optional, no command
to which the state attaches an "if you
please."
What has happened to us? Why is it necessary,
at this moment, in this forum to repeat what should
be axiomatic and accepted? Many, many words
more eloquent than mine have examined from
every angle the genesis, the roots, the grievances,
the despair, the bitterness, the emotion, the frustration
that have resulted in the tragedies of these
Responsible Citzenship
Now what is the responsibility of a citizen-the
majestic title bestowed on those of us who create
and share in the values of the law society? Let
there be no question of where we stand on human
rights and our rejection of discrimination. Surely
the continuing social task for the morally sensitive
citizen is to impart reality to the yet unachieved
ideal of full and equal participation by all and in all
our values and opportunities.
Yet we must remember that there are no easy
solutions for man's inhumanity to man. Justice
Frankfurter once said: "Only those lacking responsible
humility will have a confident solution to
problems as intractable as the frictions attributable
to differences of color, race, or religion."
Let's not forget there is nothing new in violence.
Violence has throughout mankind's history been
too often a way of life. Whole continents have
been involved in riot, rebellion, and revolution.
Human rights problems exist in India, in Asia, in
the Middle East, and in Africa. We cannot sanction
terror in our cities. Retaliation is not justified by
bitterness or past disillusionment. No individual or
group at any time, for any reason, has a right to
exact self-determined retribution. All too often,
retaliation injures the innocent at random and provokes
counterretaliation against those equally
innocent.
Our imperfections do not justify tearing down
the structures which have given us our progress.
The only solution is the free and open law society.
In times when man's progress seems painfully slow
on any one issue, we might also consider how well
we are doing on all issues compared to most areas
of the world over most of the world's history.
In this frame of reference let us identify certain
current forces whose aim is to destroy the law
society.
Ethnological warfare, the inciting of dissension
and conflicts between nationalities and races, has
been a widely exploited revolutionary tactic. Communists
were long instructed to change passive
attitudes to "activist" attitudes, to intensify the
struggle at all levels at all times. Communists have
had their imitators, who mimic, under many "theories"
and many labels, doctrines which reject law
and order. The Nazis, the Malcolm X's, the Ku
Klux Klanners have repeatedly and directly challenged
our principles and insisted on taking "law"
in their own hands.
The jungle lawlessness of the frontier demonstrated
to the pioneers that law was essential to the
establishment of civilization. It was not the
destruction of the buffalo, or the rise of fences, or
fast-draw gunmen that tamed the wilderness. It
was the installation of American juridical proceedings
that enabled our people to weld together the
disparate territories destined to become an organic
nation.
Semantic Traps
I am also deeply troubled by certain concepts
which have sought acceptability: the idea of
"Freedom Now" and the idea of "Righteous Civil
Disobedience." In my opinion both terms are
semantic traps and only add heat to the problems
of freedom and justice for all. It is a further
semantic trap to divide the discourse on civil disobedience
into a stereotype of liberalism vs. conservatism.
"Freedom Now" is an illusion. The desire for
self-expression can be satisfied only in an atmosphere
of freedom, and freedom is not absolute. It
exists only within the necessary restraining measures
of society.
I wish it were possible to have heaven on earth.
I wish it were possible to have the ideals of justice
and freedom in all their perfect form at this
moment. The cry for immediacy is the cry for
impossibility. It is a cry without memory or perspective.
Immediacy is impossible in a society of
human beings. What is possible is to continue
patiently to build the structures that permit the
development of better justice.
Let us also beware of pat phrases such as "justice
delayed is justice denied." Justice delayed is
no excuse for antijustice or the destruction of the
law system. The fact that particular reforms have
not been completely achieved does not justify
rejecting legal means-the only hope for lasting
achievement.
The demand for equality cannot be converted
into a fight for superiority. We must be for equality
under the rule of law. We are for freedom under
law, not freedom against the law.
Let us also avoid unreal questions such as
whether justice is more important than order or
vice versa. Order is the sine qua non of the constitutional
system if there is to be any possibility for
long-term justice based on public consensus.
Flouting the Law
What about the concept of "righteous civil disobedience"
? I take it that all men now accept the
fact that there can be no justification for violent
disobedience under our constitutional system. Is
the concept validated when the disobedience is
nonviolent? In my opinion this idea has no place in
our law society.
Parenthetically, I would suggest that you
experts in criminal law consider whether there can
be "civil" disobedience where there is a specific
intent to disobey the law. Such a specific state of
mind is ordinarily treated as the essence of criminality,
hence not "civil." Therefore, it seems to me
that there is an inherent contradiction in the
concept of premeditated, "righteous" civil disobedience.
Yet I prefer to base the case on broader
grounds. The concept of righteous civil disobedience,
I think, is incompatible with the concept
of the American legal system. This is particularly
axiomatic where this society provides more
than any other for orderly change; where every
minority-including the minority of one-has
been protected by a system of law which provides
for orderly process for development and
change. I cannot accept the right to disobey
where, as here, the law is not static and where, if
it is claimed to be oppressive or coercive, many
effective channels for change are constantly
available. Our courts do not have to apologize
for their continued dedication to the liberty of
all men. Our legislatures have regularly met the
changing times and changing needs of the society
with consideration for the unalienable rights
of all. Even the Federal and state constitutions
have been amended. Our law has not only been
a guardian of freedom, but the affirmative agent
for freedom.
While the idea of civil disobedience may evoke
sympathy where the claim is made that the cause
is just, once we accept such a doubtful doctrine
we legitimatize it for other causes which we might
reject. We must be even more careful in the sympathetic
case because, in effect, that sets the standard
of conduct which then becomes acceptable
for cases not as appealing or for groups not as
responsible. Thus, we substitute pressure for persuasion
and squander the carefully nurtured value
of self-restraint and jeopardize the system of
law.
The plain fact of human nature is that the organized
disobedience of masses stirs up the primitive.
This has been true of a soccer crowd and a
Iynch mob. Psychologically and psychiatrically it
is very clear that no man-no matter how wellintentioned
-can keep group passions in control.
Disobedience Breeds Disrespect
Civil disobedience is an ad hoc device at best,
and ad hoc measures in a law society are dangerous.
Civil disobedience under these circumstances
is at best deplorable and at worst destructive.
Specific disobedience breeds disrespect and
promotes general disobedience. Our grievances
must be settled in the courts and not in the
streets. Muscle is no substitute for morality. Civil
disobedience is negative, where we require affirmative
processes. We must insist that men use
their minds and not their biceps. But, while the
emphasis must be on the three R's of reason,
responsibility, and respect, we cannot accept selfrighteousness,
complacency, and noninvolvement.
We reject hypocritical tokenism. We have
an affirmative and daily duty to eliminate discrimination
and provide opportunity-full
opportunity and meaningful equal justice for all
our people.
In an era of social, political, and scientific revolutions
-and at a time of accelerating and complex
change-we of the law must particularly
renew our understanding and improve our articulation
of the basic issue of freedom under law
and the continuing need to strive for equality and
meaningful liberty and justice for all.
Freedom is not some easy gift of nature. The
plant of liberty has not grown in profusion in the
wilderness of human history. Liberty under law is
a fragile flower. It must be nurtured anew by each
generation of responsible citizenry. Let but a year
of neglect be sanctioned, even celebrated, and the
jungle of force threatens to recapture the untended
garden.
Morris I. Leibman (1911-1992), was a partner in the law
firm Sidley and Austin. He was awarded the Presidential
Medal of Freedom in 1981 by President Ronald Reagan.