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Cha

(305,447 posts)
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 12:22 AM Aug 2013

President Barack Obama - POWERFUL dedication speech at MLK Memorial~



Mahalo Dudette @ TOD http://theobamadiary.com/2013/08/24/a-picture-truly-is-worth-a-thousand-words/

This needs some clarification.. this speech is from Oct 16, 2011 when President Obama, the First Family and Vice President Biden and Dr. Jill Biden honor the life and memory of Martin Luther King, Jr.

Blast from the past but ties in nicely with today.

And, PBO will be speaking on August 28, 2013..

"Obama to Join “Let Freedom Ring” Commemoration

"President Obama will speak at the August 28 Let Freedom Ring ceremony on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom."

http://iipdigital.usembassy.gov/mlk.html#axzz2cxMMPwZc

[font color=blue]POSTED IN THE BARACK OBAMA GROUP~[/font]

Pics & Vids from the 8/24/13 Day of Marching on Washington - the 50th Anniversary of MLK's "I Have a Dream" speech~
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10023528271

[font color=blue][ BOG[/font]
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President Barack Obama - POWERFUL dedication speech at MLK Memorial~ (Original Post) Cha Aug 2013 OP
Thanks! freshwest Aug 2013 #1
My bad.. Cha Aug 2013 #2
No problemo. It may show up later. Speaking of Let Freedom Ring: freshwest Aug 2013 #4
that's right! That's where it's Cha Aug 2013 #5
Looking at all the clips today, Cha, I saw many of Obama's ideas expressed: freshwest Aug 2013 #6
It's been beyond great today, fresh.. Cha Aug 2013 #8
Yes~ sheshe2 Aug 2013 #10
Morning, sweets! freshwest Aug 2013 #12
Hey, you are awake early! sheshe2 Aug 2013 #14
Beautiful, she! Cha Aug 2013 #17
Here's a poignant pic from yesterday.. Cha Aug 2013 #16
Alright then! I updated the Cha Aug 2013 #3
NY Times and Antoinette Tuff SleeplessinSoCal Aug 2013 #7
Thank you so much, SiSC, for the report on Antoinette Tuff Cha Aug 2013 #9
See? I told everyone so! "...greatest and the most needed in this time..." She gets it. freshwest Aug 2013 #13
"Let Freedom Ring" sheshe2 Aug 2013 #11
I love that quote, she! Cha Aug 2013 #15
Very powerful! Kath1 Aug 2013 #18
No "we won't go back", Kath! Cha Aug 2013 #19
K&R for the morning crowd. great white snark Aug 2013 #20
YW, snark! Cha Aug 2013 #22
DU rec... SidDithers Aug 2013 #21
Mahalo, Sid! Cha Aug 2013 #23

Cha

(305,447 posts)
2. My bad..
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 12:34 AM
Aug 2013

I thought it was going to be the one from today.. but, it's from Oct 16, 2011.

President Obama, the First Family and Vice President Biden and Dr. Jill Biden honor the life and memory of Martin Luther King, Jr.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/10/16/president-obama-martin-luther-king-jr-memorial-dedication-we-will-overcome

Evidently, PBO did speak today. The vid is just elusive to me.

Cha

(305,447 posts)
5. that's right! That's where it's
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 01:56 AM
Aug 2013

from. Thanks fresh!

"Obama to Join “Let Freedom Ring” Commemoration

"President Obama will speak at the August 28 Let Freedom Ring ceremony on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom."

http://iipdigital.usembassy.gov/mlk.html#axzz2cxMMPwZc

I so wish it could come true~

freshwest

(53,661 posts)
6. Looking at all the clips today, Cha, I saw many of Obama's ideas expressed:
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 02:10 AM
Aug 2013

Voting rights restored and expanded.

I was moved to tears when a clip said they'd present a picture of Medgar Evers when asked for voter ID.

Jobs will be created for the many needs the nation has, or they will sit in the offices of those who deny them in D.C. until they do.

That the Congress should be 'flipped' to a loud cheer from the audience.

And other great moments there. So much wisdom and love in evidence.

Cha

(305,447 posts)
8. It's been beyond great today, fresh..
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 02:52 AM
Aug 2013

thank you for the reminders of some of the important highlights!

BOG

sheshe2

(87,578 posts)
10. Yes~
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 07:45 AM
Aug 2013

"I was moved to tears when a clip said they'd present a picture of Medgar Evers when asked for voter ID. "


sheshe2

(87,578 posts)
14. Hey, you are awake early!
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 09:34 AM
Aug 2013

I am getting ready for work. It's a jeans weekend! Pay $5 and wear jeans, money goes to charity~





Rainbow colors~

Cha

(305,447 posts)
3. Alright then! I updated the
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 12:56 AM
Aug 2013

OP. And, I've been thinking that it really would have been too much for the President to be speaking today with all those who were there. Nice to spread out the Inspiration!

SleeplessinSoCal

(9,677 posts)
7. NY Times and Antoinette Tuff
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 02:28 AM
Aug 2013

Tonight while watch local news coverage of the MLK, Jr Dream speech various black activists were interviewed about their participation in the March. None referenced the roll back of the Voting Rights Act. This is one of the more blatant signs of the corporate influence in the media as I believe they cut away when the topic seemed within reach.

Then I saw Antoinette Tuff speak to Anderson Cooper. She is the personification of MLK's dream and the best of what being human is. She's a very proud President Obama supporter calling him the "greatest and the most needed in this time". I'll believe her on that because she is very tuned in to her God, lives a compassionate life, and is a quick thinker. So pleased to see her get some coverage on CNN in light of all that is going ignoring her in favor of more rage inducing racial division on FNC.

Then from the NYTimes:

August 21, 2013
Shaping a Speech, 50 Years After ‘I Have a Dream’
By MICHAEL D. SHEAR

WASHINGTON — Talk about pressure.

Next week, President Obama will mark the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington with a speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, willingly putting himself in the very place where the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered one of America’s greatest oratories five decades ago.

The split-screen comparisons are as inevitable as they are unwanted. A gifted orator himself, Mr. Obama nonetheless faces an unenviable task: to offer Americans a stirring, resonant moment that goes beyond his sometimes professorial remarks, without falling into a politically dangerous mimicry of Dr. King’s cadences and rhythms.

But the challenge has become something of a self-created one for Mr. Obama during his presidency. This summer, he presented himself at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin 50 years after President John F. Kennedy declared “Ich bin ein Berliner.” Last month, he chose the University of Cape Town in South Africa as the place for a speech to young people, just as Senator Robert F. Kennedy did a half century ago.

And in November, Mr. Obama has been invited to attend the 150th anniversary celebration of Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. The president has not formally accepted yet. But if he finds himself on that battlefield, he will once again be speaking in the shadow of rhetorical genius.

“You don’t try to outdo the speech that was there,” said Jon Favreau, the president’s former top speechwriter, who left the White House this year. “You want the speech to say something new, to add to whatever was said before. Why is it relevant today? What can we learn from it in our time?”

Mr. Obama’s mere presence on the Lincoln Memorial platform on Wednesday will speak volumes: the election of the nation’s first black president serves as a testament to America’s sometimes halting progress toward what Dr. King that day envisioned as an “invigorating autumn of freedom and equality.”

But the president will not be able to leave it at that. He — and his speechwriters — will have to carefully choose words for Mr. Obama that stand on their own, a task made almost impossible by the ease with which the youngest of schoolchildren recite Dr. King’s most famous lines.

“It’s a hugely daunting challenge,” said Jeff Shesol, a speechwriter for President Bill Clinton. “If you give some sort of wonky address on the economic agenda, I think it will sink like a stone. It will have to have some lift.”

Aides to Mr. Obama insist that the president, an assiduous student of history, is not dwelling on any comparisons that might be made between him and Dr. King, in large part because he sees it as foolish to try to match him.

“In moments like these, he’s cognizant of the historical importance of the moment he’s marking or the location where he’s speaking,” said Dan Pfeiffer, a senior adviser to the president. “He does not view this as some sort of competitive exercise.”

Mr. Obama’s current speechwriters declined to comment for this article. But Mr. Pfeiffer added, “What does not give us any pause is the idea that a bunch of pundits might say his speech wasn’t as good.” He mocked an observer in the news media who might suggest that “those were pretty good remarks, but they weren’t the Gettysburg Address.”

All presidents face rhetorical challenges at key moments in their tenure, but Mr. Obama has had more than his share of legends to live up to. His acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention in 2008 happened to land on the 45th anniversary of Dr. King’s speech in Washington, five years ago next week.

Mr. Favreau recalled a debate among campaign advisers about how much Mr. Obama should talk about Dr. King in the acceptance speech that year. In the end, Mr. Obama made just a glancing reference to Dr. King and the anniversary.

“We went with a light touch,” Mr. Favreau recalled. He said in such moments, “you don’t have to be too self-conscious about it.”

Lincoln — whom Mr. Obama has repeatedly said he greatly admires — delivered just 272 words in the address at Gettysburg in November 1863. Lincoln predicted, famously and erroneously, that “the world will little note, nor long remember what we say here.” Former presidential speechwriters said Lincoln’s few words would make it even more difficult for Mr. Obama to find ones that feel fresh.

“I’d be pretty nervous as a speechwriter,” Mr. Shesol said. “It’s high-stakes speechwriting, no question.”

But because Lincoln’s address is so much less current than the one delivered by Dr. King, it presents the president with fewer speechmaking challenges, said Robert Schlesinger, the author of “White House Ghosts,” a book about modern presidents and their speechwriters.

“Gettysburg is pure history,” Mr. Schlesinger said. “In terms of living up to a moment, it’s tougher in the Martin Luther King instance, since people remember. You can’t go to YouTube and see Lincoln delivering his original address.”

Mr. Favreau said that his successors in the speechwriting office are sure to have reread Mr. King’s speech as preparation for Mr. Obama’s remarks next week. He said the president would typically go back and read the speech again, too.

They are words that Mr. Obama already knows well, Mr. Favreau said. In his 2008 campaign, Mr. Obama borrowed from Dr. King’s speech to help convey his impatience with the slow pace of change. He often paraphrased Dr. King’s comment that “we have also come to this hallowed spot to remind America of the fierce urgency of now.”

While declining to preview the president’s remarks ahead of next week’s event, Mr. Obama’s aides made one thing clear.

“Spoiler alert,” Mr. Pfeiffer said. “It will be good, but it won’t be the ‘I Have a Dream’ speech.”

Cha

(305,447 posts)
9. Thank you so much, SiSC, for the report on Antoinette Tuff
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 03:03 AM
Aug 2013

on Cnn and this article on the upcoming speech from POTUS in the NYT!

This is really good to know..

"She's a very proud President Obama supporter calling him the "greatest and the most needed in this time"

It's reported that she will be invited to the White House.

sheshe2

(87,578 posts)
11. "Let Freedom Ring"
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 07:57 AM
Aug 2013

Then and Now~

We were here before the mighty words of the Declaration of Independence were etched across the pages of history. Our forebears labored without wages. They made cotton 'king'. And yet out of a bottomless vitality, they continued to thrive and develop. If the cruelties of slavery could not stop us, the opposition we now face will surely fail. . . . Because the goal of America is freedom, abused and scorned tho' we may be, our destiny is tied up with America's destiny.
-- "Letter from Birmingham Jail," April 16, 1963

http://history1900s.about.com/od/martinlutherkingjr/a/mlkquotes.htm

Cha

Kath1

(4,309 posts)
18. Very powerful!
Sun Aug 25, 2013, 09:03 PM
Aug 2013

250,000 plus at the MOW yesterday! Times are changing and we will not go back to the Republican dream of Leave It To Beaver 1950s!

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