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    Written over 114 years after Henry David Thoreau’s essay “Civil Disobedience”‚ Martin Luther King wrote his most famous essay; “Letter from a Birmingham Jail.” In the times of Henry David Thoreau there was only one topic of politics in the United States‚ slavery. Many southerners wanted to keep slavery while many northerners were against it. Henry David Thoreau was a white northerner that was against slavery‚ and he was willing to go to jail for it. He proved that in writing his famous letter. In

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    No speech elicits an emotional response like the “I have a Dream Speech”. The point is that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. does not try to appeal to people’s logical side. Minorities wanted the conflict to end. King is willing to take the fight to his grave. He protests even though he knows he will go to jail. He brought nonviolent conflict resolution to the United States of America‚ he fought for what was right. He talks about history in terms that everyone will have an emotional response‚ especially

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    Throughout history there have been many influential people who advocate for peace. such as thoreau an American writer in early American history. There was Martin luther king jr. a man who doesn’t need an introduction. Same as the second man Gandhi doesn’t need an introduction. Each of these men change a way a nation thinks. Thoreau came first leading the way for Gandhi and King. Thoreau is the one that inspired the other two with his papers about how we should view life and the way we treat

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    In the letter from Birmingham jail‚ one of Dr. Martin Luther King’s major claim is that the direct action plan needs to take place in Birmingham. In response to the clergymen’s letter‚ Martin Luther King Jr. in his first 11 paragraphs expresses the importance of the Direct Action Plan while still incarcerated and how he plans to attack the injustices in Birmingham Alabama. The most segregated place in the United States at the time. Before king arrived the African American leader had already negotiated

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    2/14/14 Martin Luther King Jr. Speech Evaluation Essay When Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gave his speech in Washington D.C.‚ he used many effective metaphors that got the people motivated. One of the most motivating examples was: “America has given the Negro a bad check‚ a check which has been marked ‘insufficient funds’.” This was extremely effective because the people could easily relate to having no money left in the account‚ as they sensed the fact that there simply wasn’t any justice left

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    within the CRM believed this to be effective‚ however. After being told to enter a bus by the back door‚ a black Virginian man had‚ “picked up the driver with one hand and said bluntly: Know two things. I can break your neck and I ain’t one of Martin Luther King’s non-violent Negroes.” (Ling‚ 2003‚ p. 1) Dr. King had been told this anecdote during the 1960s‚ illustrating dissent within the movement. Black separatists had never adopted King as their leader and even those within Dr. Kings ranks were

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    "Letter from Birmingham Jail" is a clearly written essay that explains the reasons behind‚ and the methods of nonviolent civil disobedience‚ and gently expresses King’s disappointment with those who are generally supportive of equal rights for African-Americans. Martin Luther King‚ more than any other figure‚ shaped American life from the mid-’50s to the late ’60s. This was a time when large numbers of Americans‚ barely recognized as such by sanctioned power‚ dared to dream of what the country could

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    What makes Martin Luther King Jr a interesting person? King was an interesting person because he was a civil right leader‚ a priest and a non-judgmental individual. He has a historical background‚ he fought for the civil right and won the Nobel Prize. Martin Luther King Jr was born on January‚ 15 1929 in Atlanta Georgia‚ United States. He attended Atlanta public schools. Following graduation from Morehouse College in 1948‚ King entered Crozer Theological Seminary‚ having been ordained the previous

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    were many leaders in the civil rights struggle‚ but Martin Luther King was more than just the most conspicuous and eloquent among them. The present paper is an attempt to look into the social struggle backed by intense racial discrimination. The paper will also try to understand the role and contribution of great leaders towards the eradication and liberation of racial inequality. This paper is an attempt to analyze the role of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his struggle for a more liberal society

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    is saying is that a law that is unjust does not serve the purpose of natural law. In this essay‚ I intend to argue that Martin Luther King Jr. in his 1963 “Letters from a Birmingham Jail” adapted the principles of St. Thomas Aquinas’ conception of natural law to successfully argue against Alabama’s segregation laws. King’s letter is founded on the principle of natural law. In April of 1963 Martin Luther King Jr. was jailed for a non-violent campaign of marches and sit-ins which had been organized

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