ww2
No
The answer is actually just below the question, it was the Vietnam war.
He opposed it because he believed that militarism was allied with racism.
That freedom should be won on the homefront before being won overseas.
No, he did not. The Civil War was long over before he was even born.
Martin Luther King Jr. was against the USA involvement in Vietnam. He thought the U.S. government brought too much violence upon the world. King thought the money being spent on the war could be put to better use on social welfare.
a war
i think it was the war
Martin Luther King Jr. opposed U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. He expressed his dissent in a speech titled "Beyond Vietnam," delivered in April 1967, where he highlighted the war's detrimental impact on both American society and the Vietnamese people. King argued that the resources spent on the war should instead be directed toward addressing issues of poverty and racial injustice at home. His stance marked a significant moment in the intersection of civil rights and anti-war activism.
To see if Martin Luther King was there to give me peace.
Slavery, racism, discrimination
yes