Glad to see that white men (who make up the single largest demographic group of men in the United States) are finally beginning to acknowledge that the emperor is stark naked.
— Chad O. Jackson (@chadojackson) May 12, 2026
If the nation is to survive, it won’t be by constantly making concessions to Marxists who use… https://t.co/9KfaAUFuEj
1:06. A similar survey of college students between 1975 and 1988 had radically different answers their top choices Betsy Ross and Paul Revere didn't even make the top 10 by the mid-2000s this is because sometime between 1988 and 1995 things radically changed national heroes like George Washington and Ben Franklin were replaced with a new class of central figures in American history as the authors of the study put it by the mid-1990s African Americans and women had moved to the center of American history ask any American who went to Public Schools between 1995 and today they'll tell you the central feature of their social studies class es as history became known were the histories of slavery and the Civil Rights Movement. They likely remember watching videos like this one, [of Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech] in school. We wanted to show you a clip of Martin Luther King Jr I Have a Dream speech there, but it turns out that we couldn't. That's because King's family owns the audio from the speech. And they wouldn't let us use it. You might think that's weird. This is America. Surely we could use a short soundbite of an extremely famous speech and educational video and in most cases you'd be right. But according to our lawyers we can't in fact we can't show quotes or read on air any portions of speeches owned by Kings estate it turns out his family has done all sorts of legal wrangling to stop people like us including amazingly releasing the speech as an album so they can secure special music rights they published his life's work as a built book to secure more additional rights and recently blocked open AI from allowing users to create King's lightness these gimmicks gave them total control over how King is portrayed in media today why would they rig our legal system like that? Well, money is one reason. When CBS broadcasts portions of the I Have a Dream speech on air family sued and the company settled King's family has made a lot of money suing media Outlets but another reason is that they want to silence critics like us they need to protect his legacy to keep making money off of it what they're doing makes it very difficult to honestly reevaluate Martin Luther King Jr and you're about to see why they don't want people to do that it turns out that King you've heard of is it carefully curated creation. His estate's efforts perfectly illustrate what the civil rights movement has become, and, as we'll show in this episode, what it always was: a gigantic lie. Over the course of this video we are going to judge Martin Luther King Jr not by the color of his skin but by the content of his character. What you will see will shock you
