Why Was Malcolm X Justified

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Malcolm X was an amazing civil rights leader and a great role model as well. Although his assassination was justified. Malcolm X was affecting many of the white population in ways they did not enjoy, removing many of their disrespectful activities such as underhanded abuse/outright abuse and demeaning words. He served as part of the Black Muslims so even though he was a black man fighting for their rights many, of people believed his actions were much to radical. To go along with all of this, he didn’t have any problems with the death of John F. Kennedy which he verbalized to the public without the permission of the black muslims. Although many believed his death was unjust because of how great a person he was, there are so many reasons for The Black Muslims had a different way of seeing things specifically Malcolm X as well. They were considered heavy radicals even more so than Martin Luther King Jr. Many black people even believed his methods to be extreme. Unlike Dr. King (someone who believed in integrating and working on the friendships and bonds between black and white) Malcolm’s perspectives and other plans. He fought for the rights of black people to be able to survive on their own. He was similar to the black panther party and actually had great influence towards them. These perspectives could have made it harder on him because of the fact that they gravely differed from a lot of more known civil rights legends, thus propelling him into a space of danger that even people like Martin Luther King Jr wasn't safe from. Malcolm X's way of life was far from ideal in the eyes of many white and black New York is where Malcolm lost his life to begin with so they would have better access to the information anyways. Contains information about his life once again and his relationship to Dr. King in general. Ali, Zaheer. “Malcolm X's Death Revisited.” CNN, Cable News Network, 17 Feb. 2015, www.cnn.com/2015/02/17/opinion/ali-malcolm-x-assassination-anniversary/index.html. This is another good source surprising for its age compared to others. It is generally trusteed by most areas in America. The fact that they have an interview video with some of the people from that time period also helps to make it a good source. Condit, Celeste Michelle, and John Louis Lucaites. “Malcolm X and the Limits of the Rhetoric of Revolutionary Dissent.” Journal of Black Studies, vol. 23, no. 3, 1993, pp. 291–313. JSTOR, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/2784569. This source is an approved database. The ability to have this journal to learn things about the area of his death is helpful, contains minor information of the FBI file like most websites do. It also has other pages I can look at afterwards connected to the same

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