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Does John Locke Make A Just Law

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Money has become the lethal weapon that controls everything in society, it is an essential need in order to survive. Without money one simply cannot provide for their basic needs such as food, housing, clothing etc. As the value of money increases in the country it creates a heavy burden on the lower class. In terms of wealth in the United States we have the lower class (bottom twenty percent), the middle class (second twenty percent, middle twenty percent), and the upper class (fourth twenty percent, top twenty percent). As time passes by, the gap between the top twenty percent and the bottom twenty percent rapidly increases, leaving a dramatic gap between the two. The question that comes to thought is, is the distribution of wealth in the …show more content…

According to Martin Luther King Jr. in his letter from Birmingham jail, he states several arguments to what makes a law just. A few of them are: a just law is a law that does not intend to harm minorities, a law that is willingly accepted by the people, and a law that the majority can abide to (King 5-6). John Locke is a philosopher that supported MLK’s way of identifying a just law as a law that majority can abide to because this law implements that laws must pertain to people equally, and John Locke was a person who believed in natural rights and equality. Locke believed that we are born with certain individual rights and if a law isn’t being pertained to individuals in society equally, then it is violating equal rights. The U.S wealth distribution is a clearly unfair distribution due to the fact that the wealthiest top ten percent controls two thirds of the country’s wealth (Gilson). Martin Luther King Jr. also stated in his letter “All segregation statuses are unjust because segregation distort the soul and damages the personality. It gives the segregator a false sense of superiority and the segregated a false sense of inferiority” (King 6). This quote from MLK supports the fact that any segregation status is unjust, and in the wealth distribution in America we do see a vast segregation between the rich and the poor, and due to this distinction, the rich give a false sense of …show more content…

I can assure you that if there were to be a vote in assessing whether the wealth distribution in America should be changed, the majority will abide for a change. In fact, most American’s don’t even realize the severity of the wealth distribution. When Americans were asked what they thought the wealth distribution in America was, ninety-two percent of Americans thought that the distribution was better than it actually is, where the rich were just about a hundred times better off than the poor when in reality the rich are about three hundred times better off than the poor and fifteen percent of the poor are below the poverty line

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