Rhetorical Analysis Of Martin Luther King's Avocations

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Freedom, according to Martin Luther King will see black Americans enjoy the same privileges as the whites do. The black people will be free from the brutal hands of the police officers. Fighting for freedom will see a black person in Mississippi vote, and that in New York State believe he has something for which to vote for. (Martin 1957). This paper evaluates the logos, ethos, and pathos behind Martin Luther king’s avocations. Martin Luther accentuates that with flexibility; the African Americans will be fulfilled and carry on with a happy life free from tempests of oppression. He champions the battle against racial segregation in America by urging individuals to continue on intensity and scorn. Martin Luther King is idealistic that one day children of slaves and sons of slave proprietors will take a seat on a typical table as siblings (Martin 1986). At the point when that day comes, all individuals who had been loathed and partial before will have another melody to sing in the acclaim of the accomplished opportunity. …show more content…

It is a matter of time before black men and whites, Catholics and Protestants join hands singing the old words of the Negro spiritual. It is through faith that freedom will be achieved, and the oppressed will sing glorious hymns in praise of God (Martin 1986) In any community where there exists more than one tribe or race, it is ethical for the members of such a community to respect each other regardless of their differences. Martin Luther King is in full support of this. For instance, according to him, all human beings are created equally by God. He bases this principle on religion which implies the same. All his life he advocated for this through the public speeches he made to the citizens of America. The fact that the black people were being looked down upon by the white people annoyed him, and he always advocated for a change in

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