(855) 4-ESSAYS

Type a new keyword(s) and press Enter to search

Letter From Birmingham


If people see this unjust treatment being committed with out consequences over and over they will come to accept it as okay and something that is accepted. This would in turn be a great tragedy to all mankind. King brings in to consideration a persons logical thought when he talks about just and unjust laws. King says "A just law is a man made code that squares with the moral law or law of God. An unjust law is a code that is out of harmony with the moral law." The Clergymen express great concern over King is willingness to break laws. King replies that this is an understandable concern since everyone follows the Supreme Court Decision of 1954 that states; public schools are not to be segregated. In other words King is saying the Supreme Court can hand down a just law and yet people do not obey it but yet they expect me to obey an unjust law. In Germany under Adolf Hitler every thing he did was "legal" and the freedom fighters in Hungry did everything "illegally". Aiding a Jew under Hitler was considered "illegal". Because these things were legal did that make it right? No. Should people have obeyed these laws? No. These laws were made to suppress a group of people simple because of there religion. This is much like the segregation in the United States is it right because it is the law? No. Should these laws be followed? No. Emotional feelings are felt through out the paper. A main emotional appeal king makes is when he is talking about his kids. When he is talking about his daughter and how she wanted to go to the new amusement park and how he would have to tell her that they could not because they were colored and colored people were not allowed. Also when he would have to answer his son's question "Why do white people treat colored people so mean?" King is hurt by having to answer these difficult questions posed by his own kids. It is reflected in his paper that this subject hits home directly he is living in segregation.


Essays Related to Letter From Birmingham


Got a writing question? Ask our professional writer!
Submit My Question