Most people in America have a dream, a dream that can lead you to reality. Some people want the dream to have an opportunity for freedom in this world, others want prosperity. In the speech "I have a dream” delivered by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr on 28 August 1963 Lincoln Memorial, Washington D.C’s. King states about equality for blacks and whites, but not just equality but in general. He wanted his children, and other children in the world to live and be in a place where there would be no segregation and nor discrimination towards a color of skin. He wanted not only tolerance, but acceptance from each other not just from certain people. He wanted racial equality for everyone, no matter their skin color. In The “Declaration of Sentiments” by Elizabeth Cady Staton and Lucretia Mott, they both state that women should and have the same rights as men, but the creator had given women “inalienable rights: that among these were life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” (1). The point had come from the women at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848. The version I think that is best and I think should be passed down in our generations to citizens …show more content…
For men and women to be treated equal, he didn 't want people to look at each other as if we are different from each other because it was just a color on the outside and what had mattered was how the person really was. As in Staton and Mott was not to get together as family or friends but for women to be treated with respect and have the same rights as men, having an education. Women were the one’s who wanted to get treated equally, not men because men had it all and had power over women and Staton and Mott was making a voice for the women to to have the same rights but king was making the voice for Africans