Yet what makes Martin Luther King's life "worthwhile" if he DID in fact practice nonviolence, and he was shot and killed for it in the end?
That's the part that I cannot understand. Are we to give up our "will to live" in the process? We who are still "attached to the physical world?"
Do we simply expect to "rise again?" I'm not that far along. I will fight back to preserve my own life. I fight fire with a nuclear bomb.
On Dec 6, 2011 Catherine Todd wrote :
Yet what makes Martin Luther King's life "worthwhile" if he DID in fact practice nonviolence, and he was shot and killed for it in the end?
That's the part that I cannot understand. Are we to give up our "will to live" in the process? We who are still "attached to the physical world?"
Do we simply expect to "rise again?" I'm not that far along. I will fight back to preserve my own life. I fight fire with a nuclear bomb.