Dr. Martin Luther King describes how we know the difference between just and unjust laws well first we must determine the difference between the two. A just law is seen as a man-made code that squares the moral law or the law of God. An unjust law is a code that is out of harmony with moral law. In other words, any type of law that involves segregation is unjust because it damages the soul and personality of a person. It gives the person that is enforcing the segregation a false sense of superiority.
There is a very big importance between just and unjust laws that MLK is talking about. During this era when we were fighting for civil rights the idea if you believe that segregation laws were just to me speak a lot about who you are and the person as an individual as well. To believe that based of the color of your skin should determine where you can go to school, go out to eat with friends, or see a movie is just. As Dr. Martin Luther King has said that it goes against the moral law or the law of God. Even today in politics we can look at laws that make it hard for minorities in certain parts of the South to be able to vote. It has major effects on our politics because this goes against the views that MLK is fighting so hard to prove.
An example of an unjust and just law as I have stated in question 2 is the way voters are able to vote in certain states in the south. The new voting bill was passed by Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a republican who signed a new voting bill into place last year. The bill was known as the Senate Bill 2022 which places a limit on early voting sites and restricts both the number of early voting sites and early drop-off hours. This law is making it harder for African Americans to vote seeing how those that do vote tend to go to early voting sites. By limiting the among of sites that people are able to vote at makes them eventually not want to come out and stand in line for hours on hours to vote.