We can't allow crackpot talk show hosts to glen or for that matter to beck America into forgetting that Saturday, August 28th was the anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King's
I Have A Dream Speech. This blog post is a small action of "Restoring Honor" to that day in 1963.
The ten minute speech was given on Saturday, August 28th 1963 in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC; the event drew over 200,000 people. The address is ranked as the top speech in history.
What is forgotten in all of the silliness of yesterday's faked emotionalism, aside from the fact that Dr. King's greatest moment was nearly glen becked by the media, was the actual speech of 1963 came at a time in this blogger's life (I was born in 1962) when white America's view toward blacks in America was largely screwed up.
(It's not accurate to say "America's view" because it implies either that blacks were also treating other blacks the same way, which wasn't the case, and that blacks and other minorities had the same levels of freedoms that whites in America enjoyed in 1963; not so. Truth, painful as it is to deal with, is the truth. Skin color was the issue. You could claim to be a black conservative at the time, and that would not save you from racism.)
Blacks and whites could not marry and even something as simple as going to the bathroom was segregated by race. Many of the freedoms younger African Americans are used now to weren't even allowed then. And beatings and lynchings of blacks, particularly in the South, were all too common.
It's always said that one must know history, if only to avoid repeating it. That's what "Restoring Honor" really means.
For those of you who have not seen the
I Have A Dream Speech, the
video of it is below, followed by the text of what Dr. King actually said.
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