King says that he and his fellow blacks have been denied the right to negotiate for a long time. While talking about creative tension, King says “… that it will inevitably open the door to negotiation” (King, Par. 10). This is a way that King uses metaphor in order to show how he feels that negotiation has been being unfairly withheld from the black community for far too long. King also describes the difference between unjust and just laws. King describes unjust laws as “difference made legal” and just laws as “sameness made legal” (King, Par. 15). The impact of this is that King is showing how he feels about the way these laws treat individual groups of people. These are just a few examples of when King used rhetoric such as metaphors in order to convey the way he feels that he did not act rashly of poorly timed for his protest and why he believes that segregation need to be
King says that he and his fellow blacks have been denied the right to negotiate for a long time. While talking about creative tension, King says “… that it will inevitably open the door to negotiation” (King, Par. 10). This is a way that King uses metaphor in order to show how he feels that negotiation has been being unfairly withheld from the black community for far too long. King also describes the difference between unjust and just laws. King describes unjust laws as “difference made legal” and just laws as “sameness made legal” (King, Par. 15). The impact of this is that King is showing how he feels about the way these laws treat individual groups of people. These are just a few examples of when King used rhetoric such as metaphors in order to convey the way he feels that he did not act rashly of poorly timed for his protest and why he believes that segregation need to be