It is true that there are some ways as to which injustice towards an individual can deter their growth and maturity. For instance, a known process through which injustice towards an individual can lead to the deterrence of their growth and maturity begins with the use of persuasive emotions, leads racism, and results with consequences an individual must confront due to society. First, the process of injustice towards an individual, which can deter their growth and maturity, begins with the use of persuasive emotions. Through the use of persuasive emotions, an individual has the power to misuse his or her ability to manipulate another individual’s emotions to only, in the end, overcome obstacles ahead. To tamper with an individual’s emotions serves to clear a path for future use. This path, often times, leads to forms of injustice towards an individual and potentially ruin any chance of growth and maturity. For example, Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn exemplifies that injustice towards an individual can deter growth and maturity through the use of persuasive emotions, evident through two con artists that proclaim to be the King of France and descendants of the English Duke of Bridgewater, Peter Wilks, Jim and Huck Finn. In a similar manner, in the sacred text, The Torah, a disagreement between two individuals depict an act of injustice that can lead to the deterrence of growth and maturity through the use of persuasive emotions. Second, injustice towards an individual can deter their growth and maturity through racism. Racism is a practise or belief that considers different ranks for races as inherently superior or inferior to each other. At times, racism can take control over an individual’s behavior to an extent where it will harm another. For example, in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, injustice towards an individual can deter their growth and maturity through racism, evident through Pap, Huck Finn, Jim, and the two con artists that proclaim to be the King of France and descendants of the English Duke of Bridgewater. In a similar manner, Hugh MacLennan’s Barometer Rising, exemplifies racism that leads to the deterrence of an individual’s growth and maturity through the relationship between Penelope and Colonel Geoffrey Wain. Last, injustice towards an individual can deter their growth and maturity through a process that results with consequences an individual must confront due to society. Society obtains all power that controls the outcomes of individuals which allows for immense mistreatment by society’s decisions on consequences. For example, in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, injustice towards an individual can deter their growth and maturity through a process that results with consequences an individual must confront due to society, evident through Judge Thatcher, Huck, the Widow Douglas, Pap, and a mother and daughter. In a similar fashion, Tupac Shakur’s Liberty Needs Glasses, depicts consequences that an individual must confront due to society through Ronnie, Geronimo Pratt and Oliver. Therefore injustice towards an individual can deter their growth and maturity through the use of persuasive emotions, racism and the process that results with consequences that an individual must confront due to society. To begin, through the use of persuasive emotions, injustice towards an individual can deter their growth and maturity and this is evident through the avarice that motivates an individual, an individual’s protective behavior out of virtue and an individual’s revenge. First, the avarice that motivates an individual is evidence that injustice towards an individual can deter their growth and maturity through a progression that begins with the use of persuasive emotions. For example, in Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, two con artists, that proclaim to be the King of France and descendants of the English Duke of Bridgewater, steal from the richer and nourish only themselves with whatever they gain. On one occasion, the two con artists learn that the late, Peter Wilks leaves all his wealth and property to his two lost brothers, William and Harvey. Uncertain that the brothers will come to morn Peter’s death, the King and Duke mask themselves as William and Harvey in hopes to gain Peter’s wealth and property. At the sight of the townspeople’s faces, the Duke and King “. . . bent over and looked in the coffin, and took one sight and then they burst out a crying so you could a heard them to Orleans” (Twain 86). With the use of persuasive emotions, injustice towards an individual can deter their growth and maturity through the avarice that motivates an individual enough for him or her to ignore the guilt for the use of someone’s death to their own advantage. While in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the use