. 47 years ago my uncle, dr. martin luther king, jr. stood here and proclaimed, i have a dream. i was at home with the younger children when daddy king senior and mama king. we all knew that august 28th would be a very special day. if uncle martin could be here today, he would surely commend us for giving honor where honor is due. he would surely remind us that if brothers and sisters united by one blood, in one single race, the human race, we are called to honor god and to love each other. i, too, have a dream. it is in my genes. i have a dream that one day soon love will transcend skin color and economic status and
about complacency. join me in 28 minutes for special report. now, back to glenn beck. welcome back to the fifth and final installment of glenn beck s crash course program. we re talking about civil rights this hour. and i m joined by dr. alvita king, niece of dr. martin luther king and pastor associate at priests for life. we want to turn now to some of the black founding fathers who preceded the civil rights leaders of the 1960 s. for some reason in american history we think that the only time blacks stood up for their rights was when martin luther king decided to leave his pulpit and the stump hit the stump to make speeches. the bottom line for the longest time, we ve adopted
the growing liberally. liberality. glenn: liberality of the present age when virtue and worth alone and not mere color or tipperry of rank and splendor recommend a man recommend places of trust and confidence. he got elected because of his worth and abilities, it wasn t because of what color he was or wasn t because of him scheming for office. does this not sound like martin luther king? this sounds like martin luther king. that s 1792 newspaper. glenn: 1792. alvita, did you know about the role that the african-americans played in the founding of this nation? there s a wonderful group of african-american conservatives who are history buffs so when i have the conversations with them and look back into my history books, you know, i m looking for this information. and so, because of the wealth of information that now glenn is sharing with the world, i
martin luther king s ten point nonviolence pledge in a moment, but first, let s watch acle clip, a short clip of dr. alvita king s answer to a question glenn asked her if she sees any parallels between the 1960 s and today. there are parallels between the 60 s and now. because during the 1960 s, people were being slaughtered and their lives taken and there was violence, greed, drugs were rising, just all of this and my uncle was saying, you ve got to come back to faith, hope, and love. and you ve got the translation, faith hope and charity, faith, hope and love and he got that from his father, daddy king and he got that from his ancestors, so coming forth you ve got to love one year you ve got to have faith and never lose
hope. people are being slaughtered, rumors of war, and war, abortion, sickness disease, all of this is going on. greed, america has gone crazy with greed, i really have to say that. so in the midst of all of this, people caring more about themselves than the least of these, than others. the answer is going to be the same you ve got to have faith, you ve got to continue to hope and not give up on others and the other thing you hate evil, but you don t hate the people who do evil. so hate has to go out the window. hate does have to go out the window and so does violence. i want to ask you, dr. king, if you would read a pledge for us again that you once read on the program that you took and signed once, that was written by your uncle for all of his marchers. during the days of the civil rights movement, judge, this pledge, that we had to sign when we engaged in the civil rights battle, of the 50 s and 60 s, and my father,