Martin Luther King Jr. Ideals And Analysis

by Kingnet

An analysis of Martin Luther King Jr.'s Letter from Birmingham Jail.

From a jail cell in Alabama we get a clear look into the philosophy and mindset of Martin Luther King Jr. Mr. King was jailed in the Birmingham city jail for participating in a non violent protest in Birmingham, Alabama. He believed that through non violent protest he could create enough pressure and tension throughout the communities, that they would be more willing to negotiate real change, in regards to racial equality in the 1960's.

March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Joachim Prinz pictured, 1963Exhibit 1 in City of Memphis vs. Martin Luther King, Jr, 1968 - 1968Martin Luther King, Jr.Civil Rights March on Washington, D.C…08/28/1963Civil Rights March on Washington, D.C. [Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. speaking.], 08/28/1963Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial -- Washington (DC) March 2012

As you may know, Martin Luther King Jr. was killed on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel, in Memphis, Tennessee on April 4, 1968, by James Earl Ray. You may not know that there was a wrongful death suit that suggested that others might have been involved.

Martin Luther King Jr. was born In Atlanta, Georgia on January 15th, 1929. Martin Luther King Jr.'s father, Martin Luther King, Sr. was a Baptist Minister that supported racial equality in the 20th century. It is no doubt that Martin Luther King Jr.'s father would have a major impact on his son. Martin Luther King Jr. would go on to arguably have the biggest impact on civil rights and racial equality than any other man. Along with Martin Luther King Jr.'s father, Mr. King was also influenced by Gandhi, especially in regards to Gandhi's effective use of passive resistance.


Martin Luther King Jr.'s letter from his Alabama jail cell is partially directed toward community leaders that are criticizing his tactics. Although the letter is primarily directed as a rebuttal to that criticism, his letter holds deeper truths overall. The criticism consists of believing that Mr. King should allow the courts or justice system to get the desired change and that Mr. King is an agitator or extremist.


In his Letter from Birmingham Jail you can see that Mr. King is not affected by people with bad or evil intent. He has no expectations of those that have bad intentions; to him they are what they are. Mr. King's frustration is with people that seem good, but are unwilling to challenge the status quo. His Letter from Birmingham Jail illustrates this indignation towards those that suggest, we should be patient, or give more time for things to change. In other words, passively do nothing and hope for the best. Mr. King rejects this notion-

In his Letter from Birmingham Jail, Mr. King talks about how time is neutral. Time can be used for good or bad, but the rationale or reasoning, that the simple passing of time can effect change is an erroneous conclusion. In fact he believed that bad people used time much more effectively than good people simply doing nothing, hoping for the best.


In my opinion, Mr. King believes that if you just wait it out and do nothing you are literally worse than people of ill intent. Time marches on for them and they march with it. You are not doing anything by sitting on your hands; but just giving evil the carte blanche to do as it wishes, with all the time it needs to accomplish it. Time goes in favor of those unwilling to change, or in other words, if you do nothing, that is going to be the results:nothing or worse.

Mr. King believes that not only will we all have to someday acknowledge the things we have actually done wrong but also acknowledge that we kept silent or did nothing about injustice, as well.


Martin Luther King Jr. Answers His Critics

Martin Luther King Jr. was called an extremist by his detractors and by people that should have supported him. At first, Mr. King was dismayed and disappointed at being called an extremist.  Afterward, Mr. King realized that many people throughout history have been labeled extreme, when fighting for justice or a good cause. Mr. King cites many people from history that were called extreme, yet are counted as some of the most important people in history. He concludes that there are two types of extremists; extremists for good and extremists that attempt to preserve that which is wrong in the world.

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Kingnet, on 01/12/2012
 
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BAHelberg on 03/02/2013

@Kingnet...MLK was a great human being of visionary gifts. Had President Kennedy been in his second term, instead of his first, when MLK was leading marches, the Civil Rights Act would have been signed, sealed, and delivered immediately from JFK's pen. (Their time was a monster time to be a teenager in America.)

Still, even if that had been the case with JFK, much too much time had already passed before CRA was even considered the right thing to do.

Nice article -- took me back to the '60s and reflections on MLK's thinking.

Tolovaj on 09/09/2012

I have just read a wizz with similar message. We should not look for excuses, we should take action. Martin Luther King Jr. was a man of action. He inspired many people, but still not enough. Fight for better world is still going on and it is still a long way to go.

TiaMariaMartini on 08/15/2012

Okay I found it, there is a whole site dedicated to apathy quotes:
“By far the most dangerous foe we have to fight is apathy - indifference from whatever cause, not from a lack of knowledge, but from carelessness, from absorption in other pursuits, from a contempt bred of self satisfaction”

TiaMariaMartini on 08/15/2012

Very inspirational and very true reflections. I heard a quote somewhere and I'm not sure who said it or exactly how it goes, but it went something like, "...the most dangerous enemy is apathy...". Darn, I wish I knew the whole thing.

Vinaya-Ghimire on 05/12/2012

I admire Gandhi and his protege like Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela.

john111 on 02/08/2012

Focusing on the damage done by those who refuse to be counted was a refreshing emphasis for Martin Luther King Day. I am writing this after, but no less the meaning. It is ashame that when you stand up and voice disapproval of injustice you put yourself front and center for politically correct folks to smack, sometimes very hard. Sometimes I wish sensitively voicing dissatisfaction with the status quo wasn't seen as so threatening.

Kingnet on 01/13/2012

Thanks SidewalkPhilosopher. Yesterday I was talking to a friend and I was thinking about something that really illustrates the points. If we go to the refrigerator and find that a gallon of milk is smelling funny, the solution is not doing nothing and just giving it more time.lol. I agree with you 100% on our Country.

SidewalkPhilosopher on 01/13/2012

I like this article...and I totally agree that sitting and ignoring a problem in the hopes that it will either go away or right itself, does nothing to solve the issue. This is what we as Americans have done for years and look at the mess. He would expect better from all of us, no matter our color or walk of life. Good job!

Kingnet on 01/12/2012

King said that human progress never just "happens along" and that human progress is brought about by the ceaseless work of people that strive for good. Mr. King's own personal beliefs suggest that in this scenario we would be working with God and that an unwillingness to do something, we would by default allow time itself to become an ally of social stagnation. Letting time go by and doing nothing is by definition -stagnation. Thanks Ocean.

Oceansnsunsets on 01/12/2012

This is a great article, and not like anything I have read on Martin Luther King Jr. before. What I found most interesting, is his philosophical take on other views like time, good and evil, and how those things play out in the lives of people. That he said time is on the side of those unwilling to change, is so true as we see when we look at history! When you just hope for the best, the evil will win!

Excellent article, and an inspiration to me and I hope many others. I mean in regards to sticking up for what is right, even when its not easy to help more people for the greater good.




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