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'Justice In To Kill A Mockingbird'

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Justice
Intro/Thesis
Justice ultimately comes down to what is right and what is wrong. Ever since the first written laws and even before that, people have debated over what this means. It should benefit the majority and conform to a unanimous decision of morals. But, it is corrupt.Justice is often misused to suit someone’s personal ideas or gains. Fair judgment can be influenced by personal biases or systematic discrimination. When something is justified, it is morally right or being done for a legitimate reason. http://scholarship.law.nd.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3967&context=ndlr Explain/Defend/Expand/Connect
Death Note
The anime Death Note spends a lot of time posing deep questions about justice and the whole ‘right and wrong’ idea. The main character Light, believes that his way of mass murdering people he deems dangerous or unimportant to society is right and that it was his destiny to rid the world of evil. L, …show more content…

During the Tom Robinson trial in To Kill a Mockingbird, the jury convicts Tom for raping and abusing Mayella Ewell despite the plethora of evidence to prove it was impossible. The only reason that he got convicted was because he was black. The jury’s blind spots and prejudices against African Americans prevented them from an objective view and therefore gave the Ewells an unfair advantage for being white. Harper Lee models the people of Maycomb county’s views off of the real prejudices of 1930s America. Some may argue that the justice system still unfairly convicts people based off of race, ethnicity, religion, gender, or sexuality. People responsible for this injustice aren’t all malicious, evil people. They are peers--neighbors, acquaintances, random people you meet--and even if they do have good intentions, they can make errors in judgment. Again, there is no good and evil, just people being

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