11.3: Martin Luther King Jr.: “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence” (1967)

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11.3 Martin Luther King Jr.: “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence” (1967)
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Abstract

Martin Luther King Jr. was both deeply loved and hated for his activism in the 1950s and 1960s. He focused on the black civil rights movement in the early part of his career, but as he explains in this speech, by 1967 he felt he could no longer remain silent on the issue of Vietnam. Many civil rights activists feared that by weighing in on Vietnam, King would lose the support of moderate white audiences that had supported his earlier civil rights work. By 1967, however, King felt strongly that in order to fully address the nation’s remaining civil rights issues, the country had to deal with issues like income inequality and the Vietnam War.

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