From The Jack Miller Center <[email protected]>
Subject The March on Washington
Date August 29, 2022 4:21 PM
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MLK sees our failures and pursues self-evident truths

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Watershed Moments in History
Dr. King Challenged an Imperfect Nation to Come Together Behind its Ideals
This week we celebrate the 59th anniversary of the March on Washington, where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. ([link removed]) delivered his immortal “I have a dream ([link removed]) ” speech. In a time of deep division and violence, Dr. King rallied the American people around shared aspirations rooted in our founding principles.

Dr. King purposefully channeled the words of the founders to challenge Americans to eliminate racial discrimination. He urged Americans to come together in pursuit of their founding principles and create “a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”

Dr. King knew that America had fallen short of the principles laid out in our founding documents ([link removed]) . Black Americans, he noted, endured an “unearned suffering,” from slavery through the Jim Crow South.

In spite of these painful realities, Dr. King saw the strength in reunifying the people. He saw how much progress Americans could make by coming together behind the vision of the Declaration of Independence. In his words,

Let us not wallow in the valley of despair, I say to you today, my friends. I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.

Dr. King used the founders' words, knowing that they were flawed figures, but also revolutionaries whose words and actions established a free nation.
He quoted Jefferson ([link removed]) in his speech to move Americans closer to fulfilling the self-evident truth of equality among all people.
Through hope, faith, and perseverance, Americans would “let freedom ring” and make good on the ideals enshrined in the Declaration of Independence ([link removed]) and the Constitution ([link removed]) .
Equality is a Founding Ideal

America is not and has never been a perfect nation and many people have suffered. Yet we have made great progress in trying to make our nation a "more perfect union." From abolitionists to women's suffragists to civil rights leaders like Dr. King, Americans who unify behind the country's founding ideals make revolutionary strides.
If we are to continue to make such strides and build upon our progress toward achieving equality, Americans must unify behind our founding ideals. To ignore our achievements and "wallow" in distorted history will only halt our progress by sharpening divides and stopping us from working together.

There is a bright future for America, and that future begins with teaching our young people about the founders' vision enshrined in the Declaration.

Passing Along the American Dream to the Next Generation
Our mission at the Jack Miller Center is to revitalize the teaching of American civics and history in an honest and responsible manner.

We support K-12 teachers and college professors through rich, content-based programs and resources that help them bring the American political tradition to life in their classrooms.

Together we are creating a movement of civic educators, scholars, and concerned citizens who seek to pass along America's story and founding principles to the next generation.

Dr. King’s dream is the American dream, a dream toward realizing our ideals, one we will continue to pursue with your support.
Click Here to Support Better History Education ([link removed])
The battle for the soul of our nation will be won or lost in our
classrooms ™ — Jack Miller

At the Jack Miller Center, that battle is our sole mission. We are the boots on the ground, working to bring the American political tradition and history back to the classroom. Please consider a tax-deductible gift ([link removed]) to JMC. Your donation, large or small, is an investment in the future of our country—for you, for your children, for your grandchildren.
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About the Jack Miller Center
The Jack Miller Center is a 501(c)(3) public charity with the mission to reinvigorate education in America's founding principles and history. We work to advance the teaching and study of America's history, its political and economic institutions, and the central principles, ideas and issues arising from the American and Western traditions—all of which continue to animate our national life.

We support professors and educators through programs, resources, fellowships and more to help them teach our nation's students.
www.jackmillercenter.org

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