"Martin luther king and barack obama comparison and contrast" Essays and Research Papers

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    feeling empathy and evoke compassion by taking action. In this unit‚ “Statement on the Assassination of Martin Luther King‚ Jr.” uses both compassion and empathy the best. “Statement on the Assassination of Martin Luther King‚ Jr.” takes places in very awful time and this poem wants everyone to stand and get through this together. Comparing “Statement on the Assassination of Martin Luther King‚ Jr.” to other texts such as “Marigolds” and “Lift Every Voice and Sing” In the text‚ “Marigolds”‚ Miss

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    How important was Martin Luther King in bringing about civil rights for black people in the USA? (50) Martin Luther King was instrumental and pivotal; in the civil rights for black people‚ and arguably the most important person. King was critical for the civil rights movement; he was massively proactive. This is evident from King’s first significant role‚ the 1955 Bus boycott - King put forward his method of non-violent protest as for correcting the inequalities of the American Society. Already

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    Background and Beliefs: Barack Obama Barack Hussein Obama Jr. was born on August 4‚ 1961 to a Kenyan father and American mother in Honolulu‚ Hawaii. When he was two years old‚ his parents separated and later divorced. After his father received his Doctor of Philosophy in Economics from Harvard‚ he moved back to his native country of Kenya‚ where he became a finance minister until he was killed in a car accident in 1982. His mother remarried‚ and Obama moved with his mother and new stepfather

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    Martin Luther I Have a Dream From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation‚ search This article is about the Martin Luther King Jr. speech. For other uses‚ see I Have a Dream (disambiguation). Martin Luther King‚ Jr. delivering "I Have a Dream" at the 1963 Washington D.C. Civil Rights March. | "I Have a Dream"Menu0:0030-second sample from "I Have a Dream" speech by Martin Luther King‚ Jr. | Problems listening to this file? See media help. | "I Have a Dream" is a public speech

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    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 those who are protesting. King is using decades of trained skills

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    Yes We Can by Barack Obama In Obama’s campaign speech presented on January 8th 2008 there are continuous techniques that he uses to persuade the audience to vote for him. He slowly establishes a rapport to create a sense of equality between him and the audience; he does this by using first person plural‚ such as ‘we’ which is effective because it makes all the people feel united and as if he is directly talking to them as a person. He also uses abstract nouns like ‘hope’ to make an emotional

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    lectures and reading the assigned material‚ I thought of a quote by Martin Luther King‚ Jr. He states that “Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed.” This quote relates to both of the readings because in both‚ people were oppressed and violated by a higher power. In the declaration of Independence‚ the crown that ruled over Great Britain was abusive and only cared for personal gain. The king only cared about furthering his own agenda rather than helping

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    buses and due to that‚ blacks were able to get rights. Even though Rosa Parks had to serve jail time‚ she was the main cause of those rights today. Rosa Parks was not the only person who did something like this and served jail time as well‚ Martin Luther King Jr. He fought for equality‚ rebelled in order to accomplish what he started and believed in. For the blacks and the whites to be one nation‚ to be mixed all together

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    I think the meaning of this quote is that you can’t fight to have something taken away by using the same thing as what you’re trying to drive away. Yes‚ I think that the Free African Society in Philadelphia share in King’s beliefs because they were used to take care of the widows and the fatherless children‚ they made the decision to help the whites‚ and because over 50 percent of the blacks were live-in domestic workers. It was showing that they were using King’s quote because they were used

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    Martin Luther King Jr. was‚ and is still‚ a very influential person in today’s society. In his speech known as‚ “I Have a Dream”‚ he highlights the themes of freedom‚ justice‚ and brotherhood/sisterhood to show the problems that he saw during his time‚ and his hopes for the future. If Dr. King was alive today‚ he would still be working towards his dream for the nation. Consequently‚ there are many events that happen today that oppose King’s themes of freedom‚ justice‚ and brotherhood/sisterhood.

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