I Have a Dream (Copypasta)

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"I Have a Dream" Speech by Dr. Martin Luther King jr.

  • Good to use on MLK Day Raid.
  • The familiar "I have a dream" part of the speech starts about two-thirds through it.

I am happy to join with you today, <br> in what will go down in history as <br> the greatest demonstration for freedom <br> in the history of our nation. <br> Five score years ago, <br> a great American, <br> in whose symbolic shadow we stand today, <br> signed the Emancipation Proclamation. <br> This momentous decree came as <br> a great beacon light of hope <br> to millions of Negro slaves <br> who had been seared in the flames of <br> withering injustice. <br> It came as a joyous daybreak <br> to end the long night of their captivity. <br> But one hundred years later, <br> the Negro still is not free. <br> One hundred years later, <br> the life of the Negro is still sadly <br> crippled by the manacles of segregation <br> and the chains of discrimination. <br> One hundred years later, <br> the Negro lives on a lonely island <br> of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean <br> of material prosperity. <br> One hundred years later, <br> the Negro is still languished <br> in the corners of American society <br> and finds himself an exile in his own land. <br> And so we've come here today to <br> dramatize a shameful condition. <br> In a sense we've come to our <br> nation's capital to cash a check. <br> When the architects of our republic <br> wrote the magnificent words of the <br> Constitution and the <br> Declaration of Independence, <br> they were signing a promissory note <br> to which every American was to fall heir. <br> This note was a promise that all men, <br> yes, black men as well as white men, <br> would be guaranteed the <br> "unalienable Rights" of <br> "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." <br> It is obvious today that America has <br> defaulted on this promissory note, <br> insofar as her citizens of color are concerned. <br> Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, <br> America has given the Negro people <br> a bad check, a check which has <br> come back marked "insufficient funds." <br>

But we refuse to believe that <br> the bank of justice is bankrupt. <br> We refuse to believe that there <br> are insufficient funds in the great vaults <br> of opportunity of this nation. <br> And so, we've come to cash this check, <br> a check that will give us upon <br> demand the riches of freedom, <br> and the security of justice. <br> We have also come to this hallowed spot <br> to remind America of the fierce <br> urgency of Now. This is no time to engage <br> in the luxury of cooling off or to take the <br> tranquilizing drrug of gradualism. <br> Now is the time to make real the <br> promises of democracy. <br> Now is the time to rise from the dark <br> and desolate valley of segregation <br> to the sunlit path of racial justice. <br> Now is the time, <br> to lift our nation from the quicksands <br> of racial injustice to the solid rock of brotherhood. <br> Now is the time to make justice a reality <br> for all of God's children. <br> It would be fatal for the nation to overlook <br> the urgency of the moment. <br> This sweltering summer of the Negro's <br> legitimate discontent will not pass until <br> there is an invigorating autumn of <br> freedom and equality. <br> Nineteen sixty-three is not an end, <br> but a beginning. <br> And those who hope that the Negro <br> needed to blow off steam and will now <br> be content will have a rude awakening <br> if the nation returns to business as usual. <br>

And there will be neither rest nor <br> tranquility in America until the Negro <br> is granted his citizenship rights. <br> The whirlwinds of revolt will continue to <br> shake the foundations of our nation, <br> until the bright day of justice emerges. <br> But there is something that I must say <br> to my people, who stand on the warm <br> threshold which leads into the palace of justice: <br> In the process of gaining our rightful place, <br> we must not be guilty of wrongful deeds. <br> Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst <br> for freedom by drinking from the cup <br> of bitterness and hatred. <br> We must forever conduct our struggle <br> on the high plane of dignity and discipline. <br> We must not allow our creative protest <br> to degenerate into physical violence. <br> Again and again, <br> we must rise to the majestic heights <br> of meeting physical force with soul force. <br> The marvelous new militancy which has <br> engulfed the Negro community, <br> must not lead us to a distrust of all white people, <br> for many of our white brothers, <br> as evidenced by their presence here today, <br> have come to realize that their destiny is <br> tied up with our destiny! <br>

They have come to realize that <br> their freedom is inextricably <br> bound to our freedom. <br> We cannot walk alone. <br> And as we walk, <br> we must make the pledge that <br> we shall always march ahead. <br> We cannot turn back. <br> There are those who are asking <br> the devotees of civil rights, <br> "When will you be satisfied?" <br> We can never be satisfied as long <br> as the Negro is the victim of the <br> unspeakable horrors of police brutality. <br> We can never be satisfied, <br> as long as our bodies, <br> heavy with the fatigue of travel, <br> cannot gain lodging in the motels of the <br> highways and the hotels of the cities. <br> We cannot be satisfied as long as the <br> Negro’s basic mobility is from a <br> smaller ghetto to a larger one. <br> We can never be satisfied as long <br> as our children are stripped of their <br> self-hood and robbed of their dignity <br> by a sign stating: <br> "For Whites Only." <br>

We cannot be satisfied as long as a <br> Negro in Mississippi cannot vote <br> and a Negro in New York believes <br> he has nothing for which to vote. <br>

No, no, we are not satisfied, <br> and we will not be satisfied until <br> "justice rolls down like waters, <br> and righteousness like a mighty stream." <br>

I am not unmindful that some of you <br> have come here out of great trials and <br> tribulations. Some of you have come fresh <br> from narrow jail cells. <br> And some of you have come from <br> areas where your quest - <br> quest for freedom, left you battered by <br> the storms of persecution, and staggered <br> by the winds of police brutality. <br> You have been the veterans of creative suffering. <br> Continue to work with the faith that <br> unearned suffering is redemptive. <br> Go back to Mississippi, <br> go back to Alabama, <br> go back to South Carolina, <br> go back to Georgia, <br> go back to Louisiana, <br> go back to the slums and <br> ghettos of our northern cities, <br> knowing that somehow this situation <br> can and will be changed. <br> Let us not wallow in the valley of despair, <br> I say to you today, my friends. <br>

And so even though we face the <br> difficulties of today and tomorrow, <br> I still have a dream. <br> It is a dream deeply roooted in the American dream. <br> I have a dream that one day this nation <br> will rise up and live out the true meaning <br> of its creed: <br> "We hold these truths to be self-evident, <br> that all men are created equal." <br> I have a dream <br> that one day on the red hills of Georgia, <br> the sons of former slaves and the sons <br> of former slave owners will be able to sit <br> down together at the table of brotherhood. <br> I have a dream <br> that one day even the state of Mississippi, <br> a state sweltering with the heat of injustice, <br> sweltering with the heat of oppression, <br> will be transformed into an oasis of <br> freedom and justice. <br> I have a dream <br> that my four little children will one day <br> live in a nation where they <br> will not be judged by the color of their skin, <br> but by the content of their character. <br> I have a dream today! <br> I have a dream <br> that one day, down in Alabama, <br> with its vicious racists, <br> with its governor having his lips <br> dripping with the words of <br> "interposition" and "nullification" - <br> one day right there in Alabama <br> little black boys and black girls will be able <br> to join hands with little white boys and <br> white girls as sisters and brothers. <br> I have a dream today! <br> I have a dream <br> that one day every valley shall be exalted, <br> and every hill and mountain shall be made low, <br> the rough places will be made plain, <br> and the crooked places will be made straight; <br> "and the glory of the Lord shall be <br> revealed and all flesh shall see it together." <br> This is our hope, <br> and this is the faith that I <br> go back to the South with. <br> With this faith, we will be able to hew out <br> of the mountain of despair a stone of hope. <br> With this faith, <br> we will be able to transform the jangling <br> discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood. <br> With this faith, <br> we will be able to work together, <br> to pray together, to struggle together, <br> to go to jail together, <br> to stand up for freedom together, <br> knowing that we will be free one day. <br> And this will be the day - <br> this will be the day when all of <br> God's children will be able to <br> sing with new meaning: <br> My country 'tis of thee, <br> sweet land of liberty, <br> of thee I sing. <br> Land where my fathers died, <br> land of the Pilgrim's pride, <br> From every mountainside, let freedom ring! <br> And if America is to be a great nation, <br> this must become true. <br> And so let freedom ring from <br> the prodigious hilltops of New Hampshire. <br> Let freedom ring from the <br> mighty mountains of New York. <br> Let freedom ring from the <br> heightening Alleghenies of Pennsylvania. <br> Let freedom ring from the snow-capped <br> Rockies of Colorado. <br> Let freedom ring from <br> the curvaceous slopes of California. <br> But not only that: <br> Let freedom ring from <br> Stone Mountain of Georgia. <br> Let freedom ring from <br> Lookout Mountain of Tennessee. <br> Let freedom ring from every hill <br> and molehill of Mississippi. <br> From every mountainside, let freedom ring. <br> And when this happens, <br> when we allow freedom ring, <br> when we let it ring from every village and <br> every hamlet, from every state and every city, <br> we will be able to speed up that day when <br> all of God's children, <br> black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, <br> Protestants and Catholics, <br> will be able to join hands and sing in the words <br> of the old Negro spiritual: <br> Free at last! Free at last! <br> Thank God Almighty, we are free at last! <br>