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Martin Luther King Jr.

 

            This letter was written by a man who was sick and tired of seeing African Americans becoming acquired to feeling like their nobodies or outsiders in a world where the phrase "all men are created equal" was being preached everyday. For over 350 years African Americans have been denied there constitutional and God given rights for being judged by their skin color. Freedom fighter Martin Luther King sought out to put an end to this discrimination against blacks. After receiving his doctorate in theology from Boston University in 1955, King became a pastor at a church in Montgomery, Alabama. As the leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, King organized many marches, boycotts, and sit-ins. In 1963 he was arrested and put into Birmingham Jail where he wrote his "Letter from Birmingham Jail" addressed to white clergymen who opposed his demonstration. In my opinion Kings argument is solid and respectable because of his strong yet caring tone, organization of poin!.
             ts, and the support he uses.
             First of all, Kings tone plays an important role in this letter, the education and vocabulary he uses lets people know that he knows what he's talking about. Kings argument is so effective because he is not outright slandering his opposition, which would make them even angrier. He kind of goes through each point, which is most likely, a fact, like he's reading a sermon and says things like "I"m sorry to say" before each point, which means he is sorry to bring up this truth but this truth has to be known to all. King who is a very religious man often mentions passages from the bible, for instance he says " he is in Birmingham because injustice is here" and then compares it to when the Apostle Paul left his hometown to go to other parts of the world to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ. King also mentions numerously that he uses non-violent campaigns, which shows that he doesn't want to do any harm to anybody.


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