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Wit & Attitude Quote by Martin Luther King Jr.

"We must learn to live together as brothers or perish together as fools"

About this Quote

King’s line lands like a moral ultimatum dressed up as common sense: cooperate or collapse. The power is in the pairing of “brothers” and “fools,” a stark choice that frames integration not as a nice-to-have civic virtue but as a survival skill. “Brothers” isn’t sentimental here; it’s strategic theology. King borrows the intimacy of family to make segregation look not merely unjust but absurd, a self-mutilation of the body politic. The phrase “learn to live” matters too: he concedes that solidarity isn’t automatic. It’s a discipline, something practiced against habit, fear, and the social dividends of hierarchy.

The subtext is aimed at moderates as much as overt racists. King is pressing the country’s self-image: you can’t keep calling yourself civilized while treating coexistence as optional. “Perish together” widens the blast radius beyond Black suffering to national ruin. In the Cold War era, when America sold itself as democracy’s flagship, racial violence and apartheid logic were propaganda gifts to the Soviet Union. Domestically, King is warning that the longer injustice hardens into policy, the more violence and backlash metastasize. Interdependence becomes the quiet argument underneath the sermon: economies, cities, schools, and futures are already entangled; pretending otherwise is the fool’s wager.

The rhetorical trick is that it offers no third door. Not “agree to disagree,” not “gradualism,” not “separate but equal.” Just brotherhood or foolishness. It’s both a threat and an invitation, making moral clarity feel like realism.

Quote Details

TopicPeace
Source
Verified source: Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution (Martin Luther King Jr., 1959)
Text match: 98.46%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
We must all learn to live together as brothers or we will all perish together as fools.. This line appears in Martin Luther King Jr.’s prepared remarks for his address "Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution" at the Morehouse College commencement in Atlanta, dated June 2, 1959 (the King Institute page lists the document date as June 2, 1959? and notes contemporaneous news coverage placing it on June 2, 1959). This is a primary-source text in the Stanford/King Institute papers, and it is earlier than common attributions to later books (e.g., 1964) or later speeches (e.g., 1965). The quote is often circulated in a shortened form (“We must learn…”) and sometimes without the repeated “all,” but the verified wording in this primary text is as quoted here.
Other candidates (1)
The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations (Elizabeth M. Knowles, 1999)95.0%
... King 1857-94 American poet 5 Nothing to do but work , Nothing to eat but food , Nothing to wear but clothes To .....
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Jr., Martin Luther King. (2026, February 17). We must learn to live together as brothers or perish together as fools. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-must-learn-to-live-together-as-brothers-or-33832/

Chicago Style
Jr., Martin Luther King. "We must learn to live together as brothers or perish together as fools." FixQuotes. February 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-must-learn-to-live-together-as-brothers-or-33832/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"We must learn to live together as brothers or perish together as fools." FixQuotes, 17 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-must-learn-to-live-together-as-brothers-or-33832/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Martin Luther King Jr.

Martin Luther King Jr. (January 15, 1929 - April 4, 1968) was a Minister from USA.

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