In Martin Luther King Jr’s, “Letter from Birmingham Jail”, several stances are taken against injustice and the segregation of African Americans. One of King’s main thesis is that brotherhood and peace can never rise in this world with the presence of segregation and oppression. Firstly, King asserted that action is needed for change to occur in a society. He blamed the moderate folk for superficially relying on patience and time to heal the wounds of racial violence and inequality. Violent extremists were also condemned because their vision had no genuine structure for the future of African Americans. King used the Black Muslim Movement as evidence against violent