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Question:

Is it safe to break the law for the sake of humanity?

During the 1960s, thousands of black people illegally sat in the 'white-only' sections of restaurants, theaters, buses, and other segregated businesses to protect unjust segregation laws, and thousands of blacks and whites engaged in civil disobedience to protest state laws that kept blacks from exercising their constitutional rights to vote and to attend the same public schools as whites.

Answer:

The Lightning Rod Shock is just a newer, upgraded, split-gripped fancier version of the Berkley Lightning Rod. Helix construction creates extra strength with a lightweight feel while the basic Lightning Rod just has an IM-Six blank. The Lightning Rod has titanium-coated guide frames with stainless steel inserts and the Shock has diamond-polished aluminum oxide guides. With different models, the Lightning Rod Shock has a fifteen-dollar increase over the Lightning Rod which all models are forty bucks. In my opinion, I'd pass on either.
You can plead not guilty or guilty to anything you want, that doesnt mean anything. Obviously you parked next to it, whether you didnt see it or not. Maybe it will teach you a lesson to be observant of your surroundings. You are guilty why would you think you should plead not guilty? Pay your fine. Seriously if there was a fire and the fire dept. needed that hydrant people could have died because some idiot decided they were going to park there. Can you not see green at night? And you have to do that in person as well, if you want to try and say you weren't parked there. Thats the only way you are not guilty.

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