and distorted. the dream was not to put one black family in the white house, the dream was to equal and everybody s house. we ve learned that there s a huge difference between the rights of the individual and collective rights. there s no such thing as collective rights. you have rights as a human, you have rights as an individual. with individual rights, we can be free, but in a society where we are required to live collectively, we cannot be free. we ve learned the progressives have been making a mockery of the civil rights movement. totally different. this woman is mocking and laughing it up. look at this man, look at this man, look at this man, this one, this one. they re frightened. look at his face, you don t think he knew he was going to die? you don t think he knew what was at stake?
. 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
stood for and now, when i see speaker pelosi with the african-americans gathered around here and they re really trying to tear down the dream, to destroy the american dream of life, liberty and the pursuant of happiness for one family, one human family, i think it s a travesty and i just ask america, i beg america, please, don t be moved by your emotions. when you see a group of people in what appears to be a civil rights effort, look into the history and see what they re really saying. next, the african-americans next, the african-americans ñ÷÷ñppeceded the civil rights
we ve got folks now like the reverend al sharpton telling people that martin luther king s dream was really about redistribution of wealth. here said to me the other day, reverend sharpton, we ve achieved a dream of dr. king and i told them that was not dr. king s dream. a great man working with the president and supported the president. but the dream was not to put one black family in the white house. the dream was to make everybody equal in everybody s house. glenn: i don t remember that. really? we also have the naacp now telling everyone that king was a socialist. he said the naacp came out, i don t know, six months ago, saying that we wouldn t be celebrating martin luther king day if we really knew who he was. wait a minute, hang on just a second.
african-americans gathered around here and they re really trying to tear down the dream, to destroy the american dream of life, liberty and the pursuant of happiness for one family, one human family, i think it s a travesty and i just ask america, i beg america, please, don t be moved by your emotions. when you see a group of people in what appears to be a civil rights effort, look into the history and see what they re really saying. next, the african-americans who preceded the civil rights leaders of the 1960 s by a century or two.