What Is The Moral Of The Great Debaters By James Farmer Jr

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In the movie,”The Great Debaters”, the main character James Farmer Jr. discuss about the unjust laws in America. According to his closing argument, it was acknowledged in society for citizens to protest against unfair laws. Farmer debated with Harvard an Ivy League University as a small college about the civil disobedience and their moral weapon in the fight for justice. He protested about the segregation of black men, reasoning that there are no laws protecting the black from the white. This was shown in Farmer’s speech in the movie, “What was the negro’s crime that he should be hung, without trial...But the law did nothing.” This quote delineate how white men still believe they have dominance over the black people because they were slaves and this resulted to them being treated inferior. …show more content…

Another quote that support Farmer’s arguments is displayed at the end of his speech,”Saint Augustine said,” An unjust law is no law at all,” which means I have the right, even a duty to resist- with violence or civil disobedience. You should pray I choose the latter.”Farmer’s final words from this speech indicates how the people should protest against the unjust laws with the role to rebel with moral values against the discrimination of racial segregation using civil disobedience . Referencing from a quote from Saint Augustine, he proclaim how it does not matter if you break an unjust law if the law is already unfair and causes pain in the first place. People protest unjust laws to protect and change for a better future for their family and the ones they