usually people poor water on it so you can see it. it just says dr. martin luther king, i have a dream. it s right there that martin luther king stood and delivered his i have a dream speech. for me, that was a little humbling because i m not going to be standing there. i m way down the stairs from there. but what that man did and what he went through and the people that came and what they went through to come. i ve read the papers from the day before his speech. it was incredible with what he said. he hasn t been carved in stone. he s more of a man and less than a monument, so i can relate to him more than giant abraham lincoln. but it s impossible to look around in that area and not be overwhelmed by the sense of history of it all. when i say history, i mean the history of america. our first president, not
the capital. it s a miracle. and, the weather this saturday is also a miracle. it s supposed to be perfect. in august, in washington, d.c., this is a swamp. it s supposed to be 82 and low humidity and perfect sunshine. i mean, thank you. thank you. the lincoln memorial and reflecting pool, if you haven t seen the new world war ii monument, it s remarkable. bring your children to see the washington monument. it s looming in the distance. if they re not watching, ask them. this you see up a quarter of the way, the stone changes colors. nobody knows this. ask them why it s a different color. do you know? that s where they stopped building it in the civil war. it s pretty amazing to see the history. for me, it was quite humbling to stand as i m walking up the stairs. you ll see it in the center, one flight down from abe lincoln. you will see carved in stone,