Mr. Higgins
U.S. History Honors Period 4
14 November 2015
Martin Luther King, J.r
Who was Martin Luther King, J.r? Martin Luther King’s involvement with the civil rights movement is a turning point in history. Because of him, and the help from others, all races, and backgrounds today, are all treated with equality. After everything Dr. King had went through through his life, he showed Martin Luther King was viewed as a parading protest leader, by the universe, and a highly developed individual, lecturer, civil rights leader, and the sense of right and wrong of a nation. Martin Luther King Jr. was a Baptist preacher and a socially, highly developed man indeed, who led the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. It lasted …show more content…
helped transform America. He had brought to the world's attention how unethically and horrible blacks were treated. King had the assistance of billions of Americans. His hard-hitting authority and amazing control of speech gave people the confidence and bravery to keep working peaceably even when others did not. This soon led to new different laws that finished the training of keeping people of different backgrounds apart, making life open-minded for everybody. America will always remember the work of Martin Luther King, Jr. Each year, on the third Monday in January, we celebrate his birthday. This is the first and foremost nationwide holiday to honor a separate and single black American. The legacy of Dr. King lives and is always in each of us being that we are responsible to promote, support, teach, and live the American …show more content…
When blacks demonstrated by civil disobedience, they were basically asking to be treated like every other citizen. This is a common sketch of conventional disobedience. King and his followers refused to obey racially discriminating laws because they thought of them to be so unfair and discriminating, making them no longer feeling obligated to obey them.
Dr. Martin Luther King was leading the fight alongside a scheme in which he saw his people as second class citizens. A society that would “lynch your mothers and fathers at will and drown your sisters and brothers at whim” (EMP, Rachel’s 153); this is the system he was struggling against. His objective, on the other hand, was to carry fairness to people universally, and to display that he could do it minus the fierceness. Kings request for non-violence and his movements through civil disobedience put him and his supporters on the right high ground during the course of the Civil Rights