Martin Luther King Beyond Vietnam Analysis

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"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere," said King. Multiple times throughout King's speech he declares things being unjust with the Vietnam War. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote a speech "Beyond Vietnam- A time to Break Silence," to persuade readers why American involvement in the Vietnam war was not right.
Essentially, imagery was one of the key elements that were used during this speech. "...In brutal solidarity burning the huts of a poor village..." This sentence creates an image of what the day to day activities of what both Negroes, and whites face together during the Vietnam War. Dr. King most likely used this example of imagery because it is comparing both races doing the same thing while fighting for the same country. Imagery was also used when King declares, "...As I walked among the desperate, rejected, and angry young men...Molotov Cocktails and rifles would not solve their problems." The image created in the listener's heads of young men in the ghettos using guns to solve problems, just like the men
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"...I watched this program, broken and eviscerated, as if it was some ideal political plaything of a society gone mad on war..." Martin Luther King Jr. is persuading the readers by explaining how from the start he saw America tearing itself down because of the Vietnam War. When he refers to himself watching it happen, is when ethical appeal is portrayed. Along with that, "...for it grows out of my experience in the ghettos of the North over the last three years -- especially the last three summers," are an example of ethical appeal in this speech. King is stating that he used to experience the same things that the men are suffering from in the Vietnam War. Ethical appeal plays a great role comparing the issues King described himself, with the unjust ones of the