Who Is Martin Luther King Unjust

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Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. once stated, “Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.” For the purpose of this discussion, lets refer to unjust laws as “darkness” and refer to the peaceful resistance of unjust laws as “light.” In Utopia, peaceful resistance would not be necessary, because darkness would not exist. However, our world has fallen people with much darkness. Inevitably, unjust laws exist. For this reason, peaceful resistance is necessary to positively impact a free society. In America, a land by the people, citizens have the constitutional right to peacefully resist unjust laws. We find support to this statement from courageous Martin Luther King Jr. and bold Edward Snowden. One example comes from Martin Luther King Jr. in his letter from a Birmingham Jail. When Rev. King was confronted with the question of why some laws should be kept and others should be peacefully protested he responded with, “there are two kinds of laws: just and unjust.” Rev. King understood that even if a law is unjust, the one breaking it should be prepared to face the consequence with dignity. Rev. King once stated, “Human progress is neither automatic nor inevitable... Every step toward the goal of justice requires …show more content…
He revealed the “colossal scale of the U.S. government’s eavesdropping on Americans and other people around the world.” Some argue that a government employee cannot expose classified information because it fails to meet his or her “standard of propriety.” Make no mistake: Edward Snowden broke the law. Because he broke the law, he has to suffer the consequence of hiding in a foreign country. However, Snowden viewed the law unjust and he desired to make a difference with his knowledge and access. Because Edward Snowden leaked the classified information, United States citizens know more about what is happening with their taxpayer