Rhetorical Analysis Of Mlk's Beyond Vietnam

Decent Essays
On April 4, 1967 at Riverside Church in New York, MLK delivered "Beyond Vietnam" , which created a different perspective on the Vietnam war, in which is a negative thing. In the speech, Martin Luther King specifically indicates that America needs to end the war with Vietnam. America shouldn't be fighting for rights in Vietnam, especially if we, Americans, are restricted on some rights... is a statement in which he experienced with "a society gone mad on war." The main version that MLK is trying to convey people to having is by demonstrating past events that America hasn't changed.

MLK used his social status and his experience to persuade the audience to agree with him because it makes them believe that he has a full understatement of what is the best for America. He was a well respected "preacher" and a "civil rights leader", making his opinion on this war topic was very influential to the people. Countless amount of people believed, he was a very trustworthy and an intelligent man, in who they can rely on to know that war wasn't the best for them. His approach towards the people was in a serious and determined mannered way of tone, he was able to express "an even deeper level of awareness" and concern to the war. People would also start to worry that America is crumbling apart because "it were idle political plaything of a society gone wrong".
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was just causing our people to get hurt physically and mentally because of the war. He made people realize how what its like to watch "Negro and white boys on TV screens as they kill and die together as a nation"... a nation that is still segregated and said they would "guarantee liberties in...which they were not found." They were experiencing a "cruel manipulation of the poor", in which MLK couldn't bare watching "them in brutal solidarity burning the huts of a poor village" and peoples reaction to them

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