Martin Luther King Civil Rights Analysis

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For this week's reflection assignment we watched an informational video via youtube.com. It is titled "Martin Luther King, and the Civil Rights movement. It is narrated by Arthur Berghardt, and was posted to youtube.com by Andrew Snyder.

The video begins with a simple introduction of Martin Luther King (born Michael, and later changed to Martin) on 15 Jan 29 in Atlanta, Georgia. From the measures of his education during his early years, he was indeed a very bright person. Dr. King was so smart he was allowed to skip the ninth, and twelfth grades. By the age of 15 he was enrolled in college, and by age 18 he became an ordained minister. Dr. King was alive at just the right time when the persons of color needed a leader. In 1955 while working as a minister in Alabama, it was commonplace for black people to be segregated, pretty
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This included theaters, diners, buses, even water fountains! After an incident involving Rosa Parks refusing to give up her seat for a white person on a bus, there was a movement to boycott the use of city buses by blacks. Taking a page from Gandhi of India, Dr. King sought to protest through civil disobedience, and peaceful demonstrations. He was quickly appointed leader of a local committee after one of his many impassioned speeches concerning segregation. Even though his intentions were for peaceful means to be used, not everyone played by those rules. Government leaders, local officials, and the police were not for desegregation of black persons. Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested for the first time in 1956, just one of the many times he would be imprisoned for fighting for fundamental rights. Then later that year a victory was in hand for Dr. King. The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) ruled bus segregation to be illegal. In a diner in Alabama, a black person was arrested for refusing to leave the bar eating are of a diner. As a result,