killers

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Assassinations have been occurring in the United States since the beginning of time. They are usually triggered by religious, governmental, or military intentions that want to harm a political figure. An act that may be completed for commercial gain, from an aspiration to obtain recognition, to punish a grievance or notoriety, or military or security services force people to carry out the horrible killing. John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, Malcom X, and Martin Luther King Jr. were all widely inspirational men that were assassinated. These four men were killed for a sole purpose, they were killed to make a point. The killers were all majorly angry, they wanted prominence, and they did not believe in how everything was turning out to be. They were four innocent men that were trying to make a difference in the world, but were killed due to the fact that they wanted purely wanted change to be brought to the world.
The people that killed these four men did not want them to change how the world was. They did not want to see the United States improving in more ways than one. Revolution interferes with sovereignty and can make people feel that they have lost control over their terrain. It is not just political, as in who has the power. America’s sense of self-determination is often the first thing to disappear when it is faced with a budding variation coming from someone new. On November 22, 1963 John F. Kennedy was murdered by Lee Harvey Oswald. Oswald not only despised the way Americans managed to survive in their lives, but also how they respected JFK. He did not like the route JFK was leading the United States. James Earl Ray was racist towards Martin Luther King Jr., because he did not feel as if African Americans should be moving...

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...to make Muhammad back on top. Power can make a person go insane and that could ruin the world by their selfish, demonic ways.
John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, Malcom X, and Martin Luther King Jr. all valued everything they stood for. They wanted to make a change in a world that was filled with ignorance, anger, and jealousy. The killers wanted supremacy and fame, they were angered by everything happening, and they explicitly hated the road everything was headed towards. These four men were not able to fully complete their dreams. Their actions not only affected the four men, but also millions of people around the world. John C. Maxwell once said, “A man must be big enough to admit his mistakes, smart enough to profit from them, and strong enough to correct them.” The murders could not have done that because their mistakes were too critical to profit from them.

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