Martin Luther King's Letter From Birmingham Jail

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One of the more notable points that Martin Luther King’s “Letter from the Birmingham Jail” regarding the state of individual civil rights is there it requires, on the individual level, the need and ability to be impatient if attaining those civil rights proves to be much more difficult than is required. As King comments on frequently throughout the letter, the ministers often criticized his civil protests to be unwise and untimely, wherein the new city administration should have been given the opportunity to react first. Despite this, King argues that not a single gain of civil rights has ever been attained without “determined legal and nonviolent pressure.” It is evident through his letter then that individual civil rights cannot be attained if any semblance of passivism is present, as those with power and authority who also possess privilege only suggest a gradual implementation of what King was requesting to be done. To continue, King also asserted that when individual civil rights are involved, individuals …show more content…

Not only does it hinder those who are segregated by forcing them to assume a sense of inferiority, it also builds up the segregator – the one in the position of power and authority – a false sense of superiority which will inevitably harm the state in the long run. He illustrates this point with the example of Alabama, wherein he discusses how the laws present there hinder black voters from truly voicing their own opinions in addition to voting on segregation laws. By impeding these laws, the action done is impeding on the individuals’ civil rights. Essentially, the argument present on King’s behalf is that the laws that combat individual civil rights hinder the movement of the people – not simply Black people – but all people in that it renders the state into one where only certain classes of people benefit despite the insistence that all are

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