Letter From Birmingham Jail Analysis

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When I was younger, the word injustice meant nothing to me. My moral compass was either right or wrong, black or white; it was always just something I saw on television. In “Letter from a Birmingham Jail”, Martin Luther King Jr.’s response to eight clergymen who condemned him as an “outsider”, King ridicules the clergy’s chastisement of his presence in Birmingham. He advocates that people have the moral responsibility to break unjust laws. He also defends a non-violent stance against racism and oppression. Specifically, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere” (King 262). King is saying discrimination and bias breed a generation of even more discrimination and even more bias, a never ending cycle on our society. I agree with King because the favor of discrimination has changed, but the heart of discrimination has not changed. When it comes to marriage and our society, most people believe it to be a part of life. Where this agreement usually ends, however, is on the question of gay marriage. Whereas some are convinced that marriage should be between a man and a woman, others …show more content…

Consider Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird for example, Tom Robinson, a black man, faces trial for raping a white woman, a charge for which he is innocent. Intent on lynching him, a crowd of men approach Robinson’s cell determined to kill him based on the color of his skin. Along the same lines, social media users attack other users. Twitter and Instagram, for example, are Petri dishes for hate, abuse, and discrimination. I have personally seen a girl named “Sally” bombarded by a slew of tweets criticizing her body. She hasn't responded online, but I see her in school with her eyes trained to the ground, I know those harsh words have affected her. In short, she is getting lynched right next to Robinson, proving discrimination is still here, no matter the age or

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