Xander Purinton Mrs. Walsh English 9 April 2024 Use of Appeals to Progress Movements of Freedom For decades, people have been fighting for freedom and equality worldwide. In 1963, in Martin Luther King's (MLK) letter from Birmingham Jail, he talked about the inequality and racism in America, and years later, the Syrian war started. Only a few short years later, after the war started, Barack Obama told America about what was going on in Syria. Obama's “Address to the Nation on Syria” and MLK’s “Letter from a Birmingham Prison” appeal to emotions, demonstrating that they give people the correct mindset to stand up and fight for freedom in their own countries and help others. In MLK’s letter from prison, he explains his thoughts on how racist America is and describes how people do not want to change the imperfect and unequal America that it was at the time. …show more content…
Will we be extremists for the preservation of injustice, or will we be extremists for the cause of justice?” (King 7). This directly shows how he wants people to fight for equality and the greater good of America that MLK thinks America needs. MLK uses the fuel he gives people to light a fire in people's hearts, using pathos to encourage them to make positive changes to the world. An additional example of MLK promoting equality for everyone is when MLK talks about how: “Its unjust treatment of Negro homes and churches. in this nation.” (King 2). This evidence shows how people are treated not only in Birmingham, but across the nation. This connects to pathos because it tries to connect to the reader's head by using vivid imagery to paint a picture in the reader's mind. Decades later, the situation in Syria arises, and Obama talks about how thousands of people are dying and suffering from the