Political cartoons are pictures that represent something in humanity and display an opinion based on a political dispute. But, whatever the cartoon may be representing, is not visible until the picture is scrutinized. They’re filled with emotions, agony and or anger. This factor is what makes the cartoons all unique and able to withhold a dependent message. A person should be looked at through that same lense. There is more following people than what the human mind can see; things that the human mind can stop to think about before they form a solitary opinion. One can not form an opinion on a person based on the “honored codes of society” because it denies them the ability to have the truth. The truth will remain hidden until their morals or perspective are recognized because it is those that …show more content…
Atticus Finch, In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, attempts to display this in his defence in court. He was trying to get his town and jury to see things from a more enlightened point of view, to save a mans life. Though, Atticus lost the case, he did not fail to speak the truth. “Guilty… guilty… guilty… guilty … ” (Lee 282) The people of Maycomb County, having grown up with the codes of racism, decided not to listen. Now that time has past, there are more people that can concur with atticus’s ideas on the “time honored code of our society”. Though, problem still remains. There are thousands of people today that still continue to create their own “blind spots” because of those honored codes. Blind spots are imperfections that can be fixed when society decides to finally listen. These codes would be mended and people would no longer