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Letter From Birmingham Jail By Martin Luther King Jr.

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Letter from Birmingham Jail was written by Martin Luther King Jr. As he states in the title, in a Birmingham, Alabama jail. Martin Luther King Jr. was jailed because he participated on a nonviolent protest of segregation in public places such as lunch counters and public restrooms. During his jail time, Martin Luther King Jr. read a criticism about a protest made by a group of white ministers, accusing King of being an outsider, of using extreme measures that incite hatred and violence, that his demonstrations were “unwise and untimely” and also suggesting that the racial issues should be “properly pursued in the courts”. In other words, they were suggesting that black people should not protest, but wait for the court system to work …show more content…

He says that because they are religious people, and as people who have religious beliefs, they should be positioning themselves by the side of justice, instead of doing what they were doing because it was orderly.
Martin Luther King Jr. appeals to reason and logic thorough the letter. Shows rational thought while describing the “steps” involved in a pacific protest. “In any nonviolent campaign there are four basic steps: collection of the facts to determine whether injustices exist; negotiation; self-purification; and direct action.” He also describes real conditions and facts that happened in Birmingham like police brutality and bombings, as well as non-successful attempts to negotiate or to explain the reason why blacks could no longer be waiting as the white clergy had suggested.
Although he is always respectful in his tone remains courteous, he also questions the fundamental reasons behind the statements made by them, including the comment that blames the violence demonstrations that followed them are like blaming a person that have money for being robbed.
Using fundamental arguments, one after another, pulling examples from history, Martin Luther King Jr. explains the difference between “unjust and just” laws, and also the reason why disobedience of an unjust law is not the same as disobedience of a just law. He uses the “Boston Tea Party” as an example of “civil disobedience.”
Some people find it kind of ironic when Martin Luther

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