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I have a dream that one day this nation will become aware of all its injustice and internal tyranny. I have a dream that one day the people of color, the people who immigrated within the last generation, the people who embrace lifestyles of homosexuality, and people of poverty will be able to walk steadfast and alongside the privileged classes of our countrymen and be seen as their human equals. I have a dream that the ghettos of Detroit, Michigan, Washington, DC, and in other major cities will be abolished through the monetary liberation of these people from poverty. I have a dream that the religious fundamentalism in this country will give way to an understanding of tolerance and diversity. I have a dream that no color at all, even of our own currency, will be an issue of consideration in our society.
I have a dream that one day, in areas of our nation disposed to racial and lifestyle hatred, thick in the muck and mire of hateful pseudo-religious rhetoric, will one day breathe the fresh air and see the blue skies of understanding and compassion. I have a dream that on this day, our understanding of all tendencies to create an underclass are taught to our children so that they may avoid this terrible and destructive pitfall of humanity. I have a dream that all faiths, regardless of religion, denomination, and creed come to realize that the world is not divided through our differences, but is united through our similarities. Through tolerance, understanding, and education we will come to realize that the message of our creator is the same across all faiths and that the ridiculous dogma we profess to practice is a legacy of ignorance and misinterpretation.
This day, when at long last we have arrived at this juncture of our history, will be the day that every man, woman, and child will be a true American in the definitions set forth in the great works of our forefathers. We will see this day as sure as the sun will rise in the eastern sky, and the moon will follow at its set. This message, this condition, this freedom will be not a mere cry or jubilation, but a heartfelt, sincere, and real understanding and reality for all. From the inner city slums to the marginal poor of rural states, to the immigrants just arrived on our shores with nothing but their lives, to all the people who have already obtained the justice, freedom, and validation as recognized American citizens, this will be so.
Our freedom is in the balance, our freedom is on the rise. This has been true for a thousand years. We will fight for equality, not just token statements of equivalence. As we move toward this day, the last remnants of old prejudice and greed will give way to the masses fed up with such petty and divisive ideas. Recognition of the fact that discrimination is a real part of our society is the first step to moving out of our mess. The second step is to recognize that there is no special discrimination. Oppression or discrimination of one is the oppression and discrimination of us all. To endorse or tolerate any form of class-based society is to understate the value that some members of our society are inherently superior and others inherently inferior. The very belief that any prejudice is real is an admission and approval of them all. Our day of liberty comes when the notions of class, of economic haves and have-nots, of social prejudice and distrust, and general outlook of preference based upon heritage are soundly and thoroughly rejected. When our day comes, we may all stand up and say, in words already spoken, "Free at last, free at last, thank our creator, we are free at last!"
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