"Letter from the birmingham jail vs the ballot or the bullet" Essays and Research Papers

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    Civil Rights leader Martin Luther King‚ Jr.‚ in his “Letter to Birmingham Jail”‚ argues that there are two types of laws: just and unjust. King’s purpose is to explain how a just law should be followed‚ and how unjust laws‚ such as segregation‚ should not. He supports this claim by appealing to logos‚ ethos‚ and pathos. King begins his letter by responding to his critics that his non-observance of laws is based on the fact of whether they are just or not‚ by appealing to logos. When King states

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    Colin Ransom English 12A Ms. Davis The Ballot or The Bullet-Malcolm X -Malcolm’s primary audiences were mainly African Americans. - He addressed the whites and the white news media‚ because he felt that they played a very key and significant role in his discussion of the Ballot or the Bullet. - He spoke of the whites in such an uncompromising fashion because he felt that the whites were to blame‚ of the oppression and struggle in the black community. Malcolm also had a very intriguing

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    attempts to gain their freedoms‚ there is an inevitable struggle between the oppressor and the oppressed. The oppressed must suffer a fight that seems at times as though they cannot win. In both Inaugural Address by John F. Kennedy and Letter from Birmingham City Jail by Martin Luther King‚ Jr.‚ the issues of inequality are addressed as democracy and liberty are discussed‚ along with allowing for a critique of the current society.

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    Malcolm X Warns‚ "It Shall Be The Ballot or The Bullet" The 1960s were a time of battle for change. Frustrated and fed up with the oppression with which they were forced to live‚ influential people such as Malcolm X‚ Rosa Parks‚ and Martin Luther King‚ Jr. started a whirlwind known as the Civil Rights Movement. On Easter Sunday‚ March 29‚ 1964‚ Malcolm X gave a speech warning of "the ballot or the bullet" (3) from the Audubon Ballroom in Washington Heights‚ New York. Extending his position to black

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    Few words on "Do the right thing" movie I learned about Martin Luther King Jr.’s ’I Have a Dream’ speech and Malcolm X’s ’The Ballot or The Bullet’ speech in one of our previous classes. Interestingly‚ I found a reflection of both their speeches in this movie. To me‚ one of the most shocking scenes was when the white cop choked Radio Raheem to death. Although Radio‚ a gigantic black man‚ was refusing to submit to handcuffs‚ I believe that the white cop had no right to cross his boundaries and choke

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    Joshua Rosado English 104 Professor Rosenberg 5 December 2012 Trailblazers Black oppression dates back to the birth of the United States. For almost two hundred years Africans were kidnapped from their villages and directly imported to the New World where they would be sold into slavery and remain there for years to come (King). In slavery they would experience “the abuses associated with bondage‚ including arduous labor‚ corporal punishment‚ sexual exploitation‚ and family separations” (King)

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    Sociological Analysis of Martin Luther King‚ Jr.’s Letter from a Birmingham Jail Abstract The paper analyses Martin Luther King‚ Jr.’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jailfrom a sociological point of view and shows how three major theories (structural functionalism‚ social conflict‚ and symbolic interactionism) are treated in the letter. The paper shows different appreciation of King’s ideas and works by his contemporaries and modern people. It also explores the concepts of “nonviolent direct action”

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    23 January 2013 Martin Luther King Jr’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” Martin Luther King Junior ’s “letter from Birmingham Jail” was the reflection upon protest against unjust laws was established against him and his fellow men. Throughout his letter he uses many great philosophers and historical events to justify his own protest to be necessary to do what’s right. King was the leader of civil-rights group that supported protest against traditional views of the society and unjust laws

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    Luther King‚ Jr. wrote “Letter from Birmingham Jailfrom jail in Birmingham‚ Alabama in response to a public statement issued by eight white clergyman calling his actions “ unwise and untimely”. African Americans have been waiting to have there civil rights of freedom‚ but the social courts has requested them not protest on the street but to take it to court. Dr. King wrote‚ “This wait has almost always meant never.” This is why Dr. king addresses this matter in a letter about the battle of segregation

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    28-2 & Document 28-3 “Letter from Birmingham City Jail” & “The Civil Rights movement: Fraud‚ Sham‚ and Hoax” Coy Swatzell HIS 202 Document 28-2 comes from a letter‚ “Letter From Birmingham City Jail”‚ that Martin Luther King Jr. wrote while he was in jail in Birmingham‚ Alabama. He was in jail because he had been arrested for participating in demonstrations. He directed this letter that he wrote from jail towards a group of white clergymen who criticized the Birmingham demonstrations. Document

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