Introduction From the first day of the proposal, disobedience of citizens has become a theme of discussion and extremism. Whenever there is a law in violation of law and seen in society, controversial behavior will continue. It was Henry Thoreau who played a leading role in this campaign. In 1849, when Henry Thoreau retransformed the concept of civil disobedience to the American people after the Mexican War, it is necessary to think that it is a very controversial and fully accepted it .
Usage of citizen's disobedience has always changed. By talking about the stories of Adam and Eve starting with the early Biblical texts, humans have a long history of disobedience. There are many examples of civil disobedience including various forms of civil disobedience such as mass abuse, boycott, strikes, non-cooperation, conscientious objections to military activities. Henry David Thoreau was a pioneer of contemporary civil disobedience when he refused to pay headtax because he believed that money would be used to raise funds for the Mexican war did.
American citizens have a long history of disobedience. One of the earliest practitioners was Henry David Thoreau and its 1849 article "civil disobedience" was thought of as a definition of the modern form of this act. It insists that we should not support government efforts that people act unfairly. The motive of Thoreau was his fight against slavery and the Mexican-American war. People who participated in women's election campaign also participated in civil disobedience. The early 20th century labor movement utilized sit-in attacks against civil disobedience of plants and other forms. Protests against the Vietnam War in apartheid in South Africa and US interference to Central America also use citizen's disobedience.
Citizens in the history of women do not follow civil disobedience as a breach of the law due to moral or political principles. It tries to influence society and accept different viewpoints. It usually adopts a nonviolent strategy, but it is not just passive resistance, as it often takes an aggressive form like an illegal street demonstration or a place of peaceful occupation. A classical paper on this subject is Henry David Thoreau's "responsibility for civil disobedience."
Often called civil disobedience. In order to discuss the disobedience of citizens properly and to discuss whether it is moral to violate the law, we must first explain the characteristics of citizens' disobedience. Peter Singer's "Practical Ethics" began to express disobedience of citizens as "mismatch disagreement" and "even if the law protects and sanctions our completely mistaken things" (singer 292) . Henry David Thoreau wrote an article titled "Citizen Disobedience"