Answer: B
Explanation: When Harrison said he was the end of the authority.
In his letter, King states that many people must believe that blacks should wait for civil rights to be offered to them and not protest to speed up this process. However, King shows that racism is too violent for people to wait patiently for its end.
Therefore, option B is the correct answer.
Although you haven't shown it, we can see from the context that his question refers to "Letter From Birmingham Jail" written by Martin Luther King.
This letter was written when King was in prison for leading peaceful protests calling for the liberation of civil rights for African Americans.
While reading paragraphs 13 and 14 of this letter, we can see that:
- King reinforces the idea that the protests must continue until civil rights are released.
- He claims that many white people find this overkill and that blacks should patiently wait for these rights to be offered.
- King says that the wait would be a good option if racism were not something violent, dangerous, brutal, and deadly.
- King claims that civil rights would protect blacks from racism, which is something blacks can no longer stand and which harms them every day and every moment.
With that, he reinforces that blacks are in a hurry to obtain civil rights because they are in a hurry to get rid of racism and for that reason, protests are important.
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As you may already know, societies around the world of all ranges of economical power continue to have certain predetermined expectations of citizens depending on their gender, which rules out the first option. The fact that the presence and misuse of gender exists in almost every society around the world, regardless of their economical sources and development (agrarian or not), means that option D would be equally insufficient. That leaves us with options B and C, which seem to represent the arguments for and against the continuation of gender roles in modern societies. Since the structural-functional theory defends stability, both options could be use in defense of a system that creates such, or against a norm that challenges such.