other trade, and I know that Mr.Rockerfeller and his associates are responsible and notthe poor girls in the jail cell (866). He leads us to believe that it is the fault of the rich and notthat of the poor. If the rich would not be so money hungry andgreedy they would not raise the prices of oil and create thesegirls to not be able to afford it. In another aspect Darrowacquires us by placing the blame on the government. In Englandand Ireland and Scotland less than five percent own all the landthere is, and the people are bound to stay there on any termsthat landlords give. They must live the best they can, so theydevelop all these various professions- burglary, picking pocketsand the like (869). We must visualize that it is not the faultof the people but rather the fault of the landlords. For theygive the rules and they are the ones who do not set forthadequate salaries to the people. So long as men are allowed tomonopolize all the earth and compel others to live on such termsas these men see fit to make, then you are bound to get intojail (872). In a simple sense, as long as we create a worldwhere we allow men to rule over us we will never succeed ineliminating the crimes and injustice that take place.The more that is taken from the poor by the rich, who havethe chance to take it, the more the people there are who arecompelled to resort to these means of livelihood (867). Onceagain Darrow manages to state that it is the people on theoutside of these jail cells and there queries that place the pooron the inside. They do not accomplish what they pretend toaccomplish. If you would wipe them out there would be no morecriminals then now. They terrorize nobody. They are a blot uponcivilization, and a jail is an evidence of the lack of charity ofthe people on the outside who make the jails and fill them withvictims of their greed (872). Another powerful statement that accuses ...