Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X had the same goal of improving the place in society of blacks. While they did have the same motivation they chose to express it with two very different philosophies. Martin Luther King Jr.’s philosophy however made significantly more sense for America in the 1960’s as it was integration based and disapproved of violence and segregation. Malcolm X’s view was quite the opposite, he believed that if you wanted something, you needed to fight for it, and he supported segregation of education and business. He also supported using violence to gain deserved rights.
In 1954 the Supreme Court ruled the brown versus board education case. At Warrens court a vote was held and 9-0 agreed that segregated education was
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However white schools had better funding and teachers, while black schools tending to be lacking in in those areas. Martin Luther King Jr. wanted to use marching to eliminate the inequalities and make it possible for all students, regardless of race to receive an equal education. Malcolm X however stated in the “Basic Unity Program” one year before that ‘We encourage Afro-Americans themselves to establish experimental institutes and educational workshops, liberation schools, and child-care centers in Afro-American communities.’ (Document 5) His reasoning being to ‘Liberate the minds of our children from …show more content…
as he lived a rough life and was jailed, discriminated, and refused proper education like the majority of black folks, he should know more than anyone that you don’t get what you want unless you fight for it. ‘But I’m also a realist’ (Document 9) Martin Luther King Jr. lived a middle class life, unlike the majority of black people. But they forget to think about the fact that Martin Luther King Jr. was also discriminated, and he watched his fellow kin be discriminated as well. Fueled by hate Malcolm X’s philosophy would bring nothing but more hate and destruction, trapping America in a never ending cycle of violence hate and murder. As Martin Luther King Jr. so brilliantly counters. ‘Violence may murder the murderer, but it doesn’t murder murder. Violence may murder the liar, but it doesn’t murder lie… It may increase hate. It is always a descending spiral leading nowhere. This is the ultimate weakness of violence: It multiplies evil and violence in the universe. It doesn’t solve any problems.’ (Document