0 if you put jobs in there, one of rights, we're talking about those who are denying gender issues. we're talking about equality. african-americans the right to a we're talking about job going to do. environments. we're also talking about war. what are those who don't mind so i think it is only natural. having what we have today twice and the unemployment rate as blacks and whites. you have to face those facts. the speech was full of facts. it was full of incontrovertible facts. he managed to do that under the guys of poettry. this event was an organizing event. the speech was a crowning moment of american orator. we think now, there's a march on washington. there was no march on washington until there was the march on washington. >> i think it's critical, the organizing that congresswoman is talking about, the organizing to bring people together is what really was the message. you're talking about hundreds of thousands of people that never happened before. gradualism. they wouldn't push the liberal health care, the civil rights bill. this is public accommodations now is the time to make real the and fair employment practices. you can go to the restrooms, hotels, restaurants. promises of democracy. now is the time to rise from the these are the doors closed for african-americans. dark and desolate valley of segregation through the sun lit and he was pushing that through right up until he died. path of racial justice. now, you can wonder whether he had ever gotten past comber and now is the time to lift our those guys, but he was doing nation from the quick sands of what he could do. and the shock of his assassination. racial injustice to will solid and the legislative genius of the president. rock of brotherhood. and, of course, the outside as now is the time to make justice you've said so many times, the partnership between outside and a reality for all of god's inside all came together and children. it would be fatal for the nation magically, they got a bill to overlook the urgency of the through, and the supreme court moment. said yeah, that's the other this sweltering summer of the thing we kept forgetting. we had a liberal supreme court. negro's legitimate discontent a right wing supreme court may have stricken that. will not pass until that is an interstate commerce is stretched here. invigorating autumn of freedom they didn't. and equality. this is an incredible moment that happens after the march and 1963 is not an end, but a beginning. the speech. a bunch of the folks have just those who hope that the negro needed to blow off steam and will now be content will have a spoken and go over to the white rude awakening if the nation house. this is john lewis. returns to business as usual. he stood in the door of the oval office, he greeted each one of us. there will be neither rest nor he was so pleased, so happy that tranquillity in america until everything had gone well. the negro has granted his they were sweating it in the white house, if this didn't go citizenship rights. well -- the whirlwinds of revolt will >> they didn't know if violence was going to break out, they continue to shake the didn't know what was going to foundations of our nation until happen, and i think that the president invited them over, the bright days of justice because he was relieved and emerge. congratulated them for making their point, which he had in and that is something that i many ways associated, therefore, putting a lot of political must say to my people who stand capital behind. on the own threshold which leads the other thing that i think is into the palace of justice. in the process of gaining our important, is the aren't rightful place, we must not be demonstration was in washington, guilty of wrongful deeds. it was that they wanted the let us not seek to satisfy our federal government to supersede the state laws, they were fighting states. thirst for freedom by drinking notice kings words. from the cup of bitterness and governor's lips dripping with hatred. the words of interposition of null fiction. we must forever conduct our they were nullifying federal struggle on the high plain of law. that's why they wanted a bill from washington, to protect them dignity and discipline. from alabama and mississippi, et we must not allow our created cetera. protests to degenerate into >> one of the things that happens in history, right? physical violence. when we look back, everyone seems like they're all on the again and again we must rise to same page. the majestic heights of meeting at the time, of course, it's incredibly contentious. >> his best friend was george physical force with soul force. smathers. his best friend was a segregationist. richard russell, an out and out the marvelous new militancy segregationist. the great anti-war hero. which has engulfed the negro total segregationist. 22 southern democrats, the community must not lead us to a republican party, great irony i disrupt of all white people. talked about tonight. only two republican senators for many of our white brothers voted against voting rights. john tower of texas and strom, as evidenced by their presence who was also a secret here today have come to realize dixie-crat. that their destiny is tied up >> john lewis shows up with a speech in which he says, he's going to get up at that podium with our destiny. and say, we do not support the president's civil rights legislation, because it does not go far enough. >> the unsaid thing that we have mentioned through all of the they have come to realize that last few days is black politicians couldn't speak. adam klain couldn't speak their freedom is inextricably because of the politics. bound to our freedom. adam sat on the side and listened to the speak. we cannot walk alone. >> why couldn't he speak? as we walk, we must make the >> because no one knew what he pledge that we shall always was saying. march ahead. and there was the tension with the kennedys and all of that. we cannot turn back. there was a lot of what we hear there are those asking the today, we romanticize that it didn't happen yesterday. it did. devotes of civil rights, when >> i remember dr. king, i have to tell you, he was controversial right to the end. will you be satisfied? when he started pushing for jobs, and then he started pushing against the vietnam war, we can never be satisfied as i remember my brother saying, why doesn't he stick to his long as the negro is the victim thing. of the unspeakable horrors of the thing meant blacks were getting killed in vietnam. that thing enlarged, wasn't like police brutality. he thought of the vietnam war, we can never be satisfied as you know? >> reverend al sharpton, host of long as our bodies, heavy with politics nation and chris matthews host of hardball on msnbc. fatigue of travel cannot gain lodging in the motels of the >> thank you. highways and the hotels of the up next, 50 years after the cities. speech, the nation's first african-american president helped preserve the memory of the march on washington. we cannot be satisfied as long we'll hear what president obama had to say, as he stood in the as the negro's basic mobility is same spot as dr. king. [ greg ] i like to golf all morning. from a smaller ghetto to a larger one. we can never be satisfied as long as our children are stripped of their self-hood and robbed of their dignity by signs stating "for whites only." we cannot be satisfied as long as the negro in mississippi cannot vote and the negro in new york believes he has nothing for which to vote. that's why i eat belvita at breakfast. it's made with delicious ingredients, then carefully baked to release steady energy that lasts. no, no, we are not satisfied, we're golfing now, buddy! and we will not be satisfied i got it! belvita. steady energy. all morning long. until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a [ female announcer ] and now introducing new belvita soft-baked breakfast biscuits. mighty stream. made with delicious ingredients and whole grains, they'll give you 20% of your daily fiber... and a new way to get nutritious morning energy. available in mixed berry i am not unmindful that some of and 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cialis. creative suffering. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, continue to work with the faith delayed backache or muscle ache. that unearned suffering is to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than 4 hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or if you have any allergic reactions such as rash, hives, redememptive. swelling of the lips, tongue or throat, go back to mississippi. or difficulty breathing or swallowing, go back to alabama. go back to south carolina. stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. go back to georgia, go back to ask your doctor about cialis for daily use louisiana, go back to the slums and ghettos of our northern and a 30-tablet free trial. cities. knowing that somehow this situation can and will be changed. let us not wallow in the valley of despair. i say to you today, my friends -- [ cheers and applause ] >> -- though even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow i still have a dream. it is a dream deeply rooted in the american dream. i have a dream that one day this nation will rise up, live out the true meaning of its creed. we hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal. i have a dream that one day on the red hills of georgia, sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood. i have a dream that one day even the state of mississippi, a state sweltering with the heat of injustice, sweltering with the heat of oppression will be transformed into an oasis of on the steps of the lincoln memorial, martin luther king, jr. laid out his vision for an equal society, telling those who freedom and justice. marched alongside him, 1963 is i have a dream that my four not an end but a beginning. a half century later, the little children will one day nation's first african-american live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of president stood on those same their skin, but by the content steps. of their character. i have a dream today -- >> because they kept marching, [ cheers and applause ] america changed. because they marched, the civil rights law was passed. because they marched, a voting >> i have a dream that one day rights law was signed. because they marched, doors of down in alabama, with its opportunity and education swung vicious racists, with its open. governor having his lips dripping with the words of because they marched, the city councils changed and state legislatures changed and interposition and nullification, congress changed and yes, one day right there in alabama, little black boys and black eventually the white house girls will be able to join hands changed. with little white boys and little white girls as sisters and brothers. i have a dream today -- [ applause ] >> i have a dream that one day every valley shall be exhausted, because they marched, america every hill and mountain shall be made low. became more free and more fair. the rough places will be made not just for african-americans, plain, and the crooked places will be made straight. but for women and latinos. and the glory of the lord shall asians and native americans. be revealed and all flesh shall for catholics, jews and muslims, see it together. for gays, for americans with this is our hope. this is the faith that i go back disabilities. to the south with. with this faith, we will be able america changed for you and for to hew out of the mountain of me. and the entire world drew despair a stone of hope. strength from that example. with this faith, we will be able to transform the jangling whether the young people who discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of watched from the other side of brotherhood. the iron curtain and would with this faith, we will be able to work together, to pray eventually tear down that wall. together, to struggle together, to go to jail together, to stand or the young people inside south up for freedom together, knowing africa would eventually end the that we will be free one day. scurge of apartheid. this will be the day when all of those are the victories they want with iron wills and hope in god's children will be able to their hearts. sing with new meaning, my that is the transformation that country 'tis of thee. they rock, with each step of their well worn shoes. sweet land of liberty, of thee i that's the debt in a i and the sing. land where my fathers died, land millions of americans owe those of the pilgrim's pride, from maids, laborers, porters, every mountainside, let freedom ring. secretaries. and if america is to be a great folks who could have run a nation, this must become true. company maybe if they ever had a so let freedom ring from the chance. prodigious hilltops of new hampshire, let freedom ring. from the mighty mountains of new those white students who put themselves in harm's way, even though they didn't have to. york. let freedom ring from the those japanese americans who heightening alleghenys of were called their own pennsylvania. let freedom ring from the snow internment, those capped rockies of colorado. let freedom ring from the jewish-americans who had curvacious slopes of california. survived the holocaust, people but not only that, let freedom ring from stone mountain of who could have given up and georgia. given in, but kept on keeping on. let freedom ring from lookout knowing that we may endure for a mountain of tennessee. night, but joy cometh in the morning. >> how can what happened 50 let freedom ring from every hill years ago, shape what happens and mole hill of mississippi, now. we'll talk about the new from every mountainside. frontier of civil rights with a special panel, including the let freedom ring. widow of maker evers who talked on monday about the ways in which her generation has failed to carry that day forward. when we allow freedom to ring, to guard their manhood with new depend shields and guards. when we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from the discreet protection that's just for guys. now, it's your turn. every state and every city, we get my training tips at guardyourmanhood.com will be able to speed up that day when all of god's children, black men and white men, jews i don'without goingcisions to angie's list first. with angie's list, i know who to call, and gentiles, protestants and and i know the results will be fantastic! catholics will be able to join find out why more than two million members hands and sing in the words of count on angie's list. angie's list -- reviews you can trust. the old negro spiritual, free at last, free at last, great god all mighty, we are free at last. >> you've been watching dr. [ agent smith ] i've found software that intrigues me. martin luther king's i have a dream speech delivered 50 years it appears it's an agent of good. ago today. good evening, i'm chris hayes, ♪ [ agent smith ] ge software connects patients to nurses to the right machines joining me tonight on this special edition of all in, while dramatically reducing waiting time. [ telephone ringing ] now a waiting room is just a room. [ static warbles ] martin luther king, iii, eleanor holmes norton. and an organizer of the 1963 the placards at the march march. read now as we look back 50 and reverend al sharpton. years and see with our own eyes founder and president of the i and hear with our own ears the have a dream network. message of dr. martin luther your father was speaking to the king, jr. crowd, he was always -- knew we encounter the now, when we that he had one of the largest return, how the next generation of civil rights leaders are audiences he was probably going following in the footsteps of to have. dr. king to address the dream. who was the audience to that what is your vision for the speech? >> i think the audience has become different than who it future? was. that day the audience was not just the crowd, but it was go to msnbc.com or tweet with congress. it was the president. the #advancingthedream. it really was a nation. 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[ male announcer ] the best thing to share? a data plan. a very insistent tone, that if at&t mobile share for business. you think we're going to blow one bucket of data for everyone on the plan, off steam and go away, he unlimited talk and text on smart phones. manages to do this in a way that it is very deftly done, but what now, everyone's in the spirit of sharing. hey, can i borrow your boat this weekend? comes through is, we are not moving. no. >> one of the things you have to [ male announcer ] share more. save more. at&t mobile share for business. think about, when you hear the speech in its entirety, is that ♪ he laid out some of the same issues that martin the third and i are dealing with today and dealt with saturday. and the congresswoman deals with all the time, he mentioned at least twice police brutality. he talked about economic [ male announcer ] from the last day of school, back to the first. inequality. they're gonna make everything from posters he talked about blacks not being to do it yourself tattoos. able to vote in the south, not feeling we had a reason to vote so make sure they've got the sharpies to make their mark. in the north. this week only get sharpie five packs for a dollar. if he were to make that speech staples has it. today, they would call it the staples. that was easy. grievance industry. he laid out some of the same grievances that we are accused of exacerbating today. it's amazing to hear him raise issues that we get condemned for raising. >> particularly the passage, the very striking passage on the promissory note. we have been given a bad check. it has a huge laugh from the crowd. >> by the time he got there, he had laid the predicate. the speech was brilliant. leave aside its oratoricals. he starts out, before you get to the promissory note. he gives you the historical basis for it. the emancipation proclamation. by the time you get to modern times. that has become a real promissory note. when you consider this man -- the speech every -- virtually every other line is a metaphor for the audience. there was -- what the reverend said is very important to the note. how do you speak to the audiences that martin indicated, when you know that most of the people there were black, a third were white. we are the forgotten y