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Martin Luther King Jr's Involvement In The Vietnam War

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Martin Luther King Jr., a preacher by calling, has his own moral vision to attract Vietnam which had a Vietnam War, involved American. He compelled and claimed that American’s involvement in the Vietnam War isn’t fair-unjust. The poverty program was a promise of hope for the poor, included experiments, hopes and new beginnings as well. It was very incandescent moment, but it was broken and failed. He watched it, and recognized that America didn’t have any ambitious to invest or to help the poor. This happened and his sympathy made him not to be patient for the unfair; he couldn’t be silence and wanted to fight for slaves’ freedom and happiness. At first, he proposed his own experiment for the reason, why he compelled. All of men, one’s sons, …show more content…

When they arrived there, they had to face with some cruel things: watching Negro and white boys on TV. In the TV screen, people killed and died for a nation. It was terrible and suffered to them. Cruel, brutal, bloody people made the slaves to get into the fear and feel scary about them. At this time, he decided that he have to speak loudly to the world about the face of such cruel manipulation of the poor. The other reason was not based on his experience in the ghettoes. As he had walked among the desperate, rejected, angry, and little bit empty heart young men, he told them, not to use any violence to gain you and your nation’s final destination-freedom. It was because the men often used Molotov cocktails and rifles to solve their problems or concerns. He tried hard to convict them with his calmly persuasive that social would be changed to your hope with nonviolent action. Oppositely what he thought, they asked “what about Vietnam?” Their question hit his virtuous vision or faith. Then he found that he could never again raise his voice against the violence. One more time he decided, he cannot hold his tongue. Martin Luther King wanted to find the poor of sake, and government’s

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