Martin Luther King Jr.'s Involvement In Vietnam

Words: 606
Pages: 3

In this passage, Martin Luther King Jr. justifies his objection to American involvement in the Vietnam war by providing us with several reasons for his position. His first and foremost explanation is his belief that the Vietnam war is unjust.

Firstly, Martin Luther King Jr. makes a clear connection between the Vietnam war and the struggle that people have been carrying out in America. By giving an example of a malfunctional poverty program, he points out that this kind of program used to be thought as a promising hope for the poor people. However, American politicians prefer to invest labor, technology, and capital into the a war in Asia rather than raise funds for the poor in their own country. It’s very interesting to see that King uses parallel constructions and describes the Vietnam war as adventures because of its risk and uncertainty. Also, skills and money used in the Vietnam war are regarded as the “demonic destructive suction tube” to emphasize the bottomless of this war and its devastating nature. This kind of
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King exaggerates some details such as “extraordinarily high proportions” and “sending them eight thousand miles away” to convince readers to believe his points. To make it clear that this nominal liberty is still not achieved in the United States, he gives the readers several representative examples. What he says is that although some pieces of news show the social liberty between different races, there still exists the discrimination between white people and black people. proven by the facts he gives that these two races cannot sit together in the same school or live on the same block in Chicago. These severe situations strongly support the idea that people should focus more on how to eliminate the discrimination to reach the liberty than doing nothing but creating a