Martin Luther King's Protests

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In order to justify his protests, King makes real for his moralizing white audience the abstract injustices and anxieties that black Americans must face day after day. He recognizes that the clergymen have “never felt the stinging darts of segregation” and explains why, from the point of view of the oppressed, he can not wait. First, he reiterates the well-documented crimes of mob lynchings and police brutality, covered at length by the nation’s mainstream media even at the time, but his reference to the victims as his “black brothers and sisters” emphasizes his pain and desperation. King has already established that he is not so far removed from the clergymen he is addressing, so he acts a bridge for the suffering victims for racial injustice.

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