"Machiavelli letters from birmingham jail" Essays and Research Papers

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    Responding to Letter from Birmingham Jail 1) The decision the clergy members strongly desired for King to rethink was continuing to conduct in non violent protests and promote civil disobedience. This was after King and his disciples had protested in the streets of Birmingham‚ Alabama. Martin Luther King through this letter absolutely justified his peaceful marches and proved there were are no other alternatives other than to protest. I can accept this argument because of his strong examples of

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    Just and Unjust Laws Dr.Martin Luther King’s Jr "Letter from Birmingham Jail‚(1963)" was his response to the public statement of concern and caution issued by eight religious leaders of the south. This concern addressed the controversial issues of segregation between black and white people living in Birmingham .Dr.King included numerous points with his response. One of the main points he explained was about the difference between just and unjust laws."A just law is a man-made code that squares with

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    to make sure they are introduced to the library’s resources. For the sequence of assignments described briefly below‚ I first reinforce close reading of texts by asking students to read‚ discuss‚ and critique Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” This text contains most of the argumentative elements writing teachers have traditionally asked students to recognize and evaluate. Consequently‚ this assignment begins the conversation about what constitutes an argument and leads into

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    protests and marches. With the understanding that a point had to be made publicly‚ King targeted the most segregated city in the South‚ Birmingham‚ Alabama. The Birmingham campaign was nonviolent‚ with the intent to incite. King planned out protest marches and sit-ins‚ in a strategic master plan to break laws he felt unjust‚ in the hope of eliciting a response from higher powers in the government. King’s goal was to create a public spectacle‚ exposing the violence shown to peaceful marches and protests

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    unquenchable‚ the tensions in Birmingham starved people for justice and equality‚ the fight for change was inevitable. Martin had many acts of protest against segregation‚ after being sent to jail and belittled‚ he felt compelled to give his explanation and reasoning to the Clergymen that criticized his work. Although Martin’s philosophy was based on nonviolent protest‚ it was necessary to fight for moral injustice even if that meant breaking the law. In the case of Birmingham‚ it was vital for Martin

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    be present because the way that someone is comes from their experience. With this‚ peaceful resistance might show the worst cruelty and what kind of

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    call for unity: A letter from eight white clergymen The clergymen’s letter suggests that the racial problem in Birmingham‚ Alabama‚ needs to be resolved in court peacefully. The exigency of his argument is to try to solve the racial issue with an innovative and constructive approach. The letter was written to the editor of a Birmingham’s newspaper. Based on that‚ the audience of this letter was the newspaper’s readers‚ all the city’s citizens. The fact that the writer of this letter is a religious

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    life in addition to the fact that African Americans were second class citizens as a result of Supreme Court cases and many laws enacted throughout the United States. From a jail in Birmingham‚ Alabama‚ Dr. King wrote a letter to his fellow clergymen citing the reasons why it is right to perform acts of civil disobedience. In the letter he quoted St. Augustine who said‚ “An unjust law is no law at all.” The Civil Rights movement in the United States had other heroes who defied authority because of unjust

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    he was a dominant voice for thousands of persecuted people during the civil rights movement. From King expressing his knowledge and acting on them‚ he was obliged and jailed (he was obliged to jail?) within King’s cell he composed a letter entitled “Letter from Birmingham Jail”. (transition?) Thoreau was a philosopher who contained all the qualities of a transcendentalist. Much time before King’s letter‚ Thoreau fabricated a response to when

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    DVORAK‚ KATHARINE L. “After Apocalypse‚ Moses.” Masters and Slaves in the House of the Lord: Race and Religion in the American South‚ 1740-1870‚ edited by John B. Boles‚ 1st ed.‚ University Press of Kentucky‚ 1988‚ pp. 173–191. JSTOR‚ www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt130hss4.11. Katherine Dvorak discusses an important difference in the body of the Christian church before and after the Civil War. More specifically‚ the fact that before the civil war free slaves and negroes would worship alongside their white

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