Through friends <a href=" http://aaccsp.org.br/saw-palmetto-order/#cocktail ">saw palmetto organic extract</a> Civil disobedience tends to take one of three, non-mutually-exclusive, forms. Integrity-based civil disobedience is when one breaks a law for moral reasons, such as when pro-life demonstrators break the Freedom of Access to Entrances Act by blocking the entrances to abortion clinics. Justice-based civil disobedience is when one disobeys a law to claim a right denied them. Rosa Parks' refusal to give up her bus seat to a white passenger on December 14, 1955 in Montgomery, Ala. is a good example. Policy-based civil disobedience is when one breaks a law to encourage reform of a bad or dangerous government policy. ACT UP, an organization that works to improve the lives of people living with AIDS, practiced policy-based civil disobedience when its members stormed the New York Stock Exchange in September 1989. The group was protesting health care policies that made AZT, the only anti-HIV drug available at the time, too costly for the average person to afford.