March on Washington - 50th Anniversary

Lamplighter • Aug 25, 2013 12:30 pm

commercialappeal.com

8/25/13



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March on Washington - 50th Anniversary


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Lamplighter • Aug 28, 2013 9:09 am
Martin Luther King - I Have A Dream Speech - August 28, 1963

[YOUTUBE]smEqnnklfYs[/YOUTUBE]

Posted for as long as YouTube allows...

Washington Post
8/27/13

Why you won’t see or hear the ‘I have a dream’ speech
A few months after King delivered the speech, he sent a copy of the address
to the U.S. Copyright office and listed the remarks as a “work not reproduced for sale.”
<snip>
Since 1963, King and, posthumously, his estate have strictly enforced control
over use of that speech and King&#8217;s likeness.
Lamplighter • Aug 28, 2013 9:28 am
National Journal
Mike Magner
August 26, 2013

After 'I Have a Dream' Speech, 'A Shudder Went Through Me'—and Through the Nation
<snip>By now it is well known that Jones did not include the words "I have a dream"
in the "suggested textual material" he drafted for King before the speech.
King had used the phrase earlier in speeches in Detroit and Rocky Mount, N.C., Jones said,
[COLOR="DarkRed"]and it was singer Mahalia Jackson who encouraged King to go back to it when she called out to him in mid-speech
from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial: "Tell 'em about the dream, Martin, tell 'em about the dream!"[/COLOR]<snip>

"He, in response to Mahalia, began to speak extemporaneously," Jones said....
<snip>
xoxoxoBruce • Aug 30, 2013 8:15 am
Yes, he deviated from his prepared text.
Lamplighter • Aug 30, 2013 9:40 am
...and two days later the (WC Sullivan) followed his leader of FBI Director (J Edgar Hoover) writing:
[COLOR="DarkRed"]"... we must mark him now ... as the most dangerous Negro
of the future in the nation from the standpoint of communism,
the Negro and national security"[/COLOR]


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http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/mlks-speech-attracted-fbis-intense-attention/2013/08/27/31c8ebd4-0f60-11e3-8cdd-bcdc09410972_story.html

Washington Post
8/17/13

William Sullivan, head of the FBI&#8217;s domestic intelligence division
during the King surveillance program, told the committee in 1975,
&#8220;No holds were barred. We have used [similar] techniques against Soviet agents.
[The same methods were] brought home against any organization against which we were targeted.
We did not differentiate. This is a rough, tough business.&#8221;
<snip>
Sullivan, in his 1975 testimony before the Church panel, backtracked from his post-speech memo,
noting [COLOR="DarkRed"]&#8220;we had to engage in a lot of nonsense which we ourselves really did not believe in.&#8221;[/COLOR]


It's hard to see that since 1975 anything done in the name of "government security" has really changed.
Sundae • Aug 30, 2013 9:55 am
Five Live have been broadcasting various shorts on the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King Junior all week.
They had an interesting call from a Yorkshireman who was there on the day. He was studying engineering - in England - but admitted to being politically active and especially interested in the American civil rights movement. He had planned a trip to the States during the holidays, so made plenty sure he was there for the march.

His take on the epoch shattering speech?
[my precis] "I don't really remember any of the speeches, I was just so pleased to be there, to be walking for civil rights and equality."

He was in no way denigrating "I have a dream" or any other speech.
But I did enjoy his honesty.
Blessed are the cheesemakers indeed.