“Yet another tactic was offered the Negro. He was encouraged to seek unity with the millions of disadvantaged whites of the South, whose basic need for social change paralleled his own. Theoretically, this proposal held a measure of logic, for it is undeniable that great masses of southern whites exist in conditions scarcely better than those which afflict the Negro. But the rationale of this theory wilted under the heat of fact. The need for immediate change was more urgently felt and more bitterly realized by the Negro than by the exploited white. As individuals, the whites could better their situation without the barrier that society places in front of a man whose racial identification by color is inescapable. Moreover, the underprivileged southern whites saw the color that separated them from Negroes more clearly than they saw the circumstances that bound them together in mutual interest. Negroes were therefore forced to face the fact that, in the South, they must move without allies; and yet the coiled power of state force made such a prospect appear both futile and quixotic.”
Quote by Martin Luther King Jr.
Book:Why We Can't Wait
Work
Why We Can't Wait
Written by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., this influential book serves as a passionate plea for the urgent need to address racial injustice and promote equality. It outlines the historical context of segregation and the necessity for immediate change, emphasizing the moral imperative for racial justice. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: Iron Widow
Source: Why We Can't Wait
“How much better off the poor man would be if he devoted himself to reading.”
Source: 2666
Source: India: A Wounded Civilization
Source: Reginald in Russia and Other Sketches
Source: Why We Can't Wait
Source: Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church
“It is easy not to steal when one isn’t hungry.”
Source: Sentence: Ten Years and a Thousand Books in Prison
“25th December 2020 will be remembered as the poverty Christmas.”