Theme Of Discrimination In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Everyone has been treated poorly or mistreated for doing the right thing. This happens almost everyday and people are discriminated upon for reason we cannot see. In Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mockingbird" many innocent people fall victim to this and are punished for the events they cannot control. Equality is the only solution to this problem and it can be seen and demonstrated by Atticus, attempting to do the right thing but knowing that he had no chance.

To begin, Tom Robinson, a pretty significant character in To Kill a Mockingbird was falsely accuse of "raping" Mayella Ewell. At first everyone believed that Tom was guilty, but after closer inspection they saw that Mayella had a bruise on her left side of her neck. People thought at first that it was more evidence but soon realized that Tom is left handed, how could he physically hit her of the left side of her face. With this and other evidence Atticus tried to prove that it was a setup. Though the judge and jury probably knew Tom was innocent, they still convicted him because of his race. My favourite quote said by Tom was, "They gone?" This quote demonstrates
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The times of this book were a horrible time to be a different race than the majority because no matter what you did, the upper class would always win. The people of upper class should treat the lower class equally because everyone would be equal and people wouldn't have to lie to do what's right.

To conclude, equality can be the most effective way to serve justice without even trying. People should not discriminate based on things they cannot control, people should be treated equally for they can't control what others think about them. If everyone made equal choice and considered all possibilities before making choices, justice would be served with no intent at