| My first memories of Dr. King are as a high school student with the 
            bus boycott, where everybody young and old walked for more than a 
            year. After that, I passed his home twice a day as I walked three 
            miles from home to Alabama State University for two years. How was I 
            to know that 10 years later he would become a household name around 
            the world? It seems that every special interest group uses his 
            words to fit their own cause. Liberal or conservative, black or 
            white, invoking Dr. King's name seems to be a tactic used by 
            individuals and groups to convince people that Dr. King would 
            support their cause if he were still alive today. Even within the King family there is disagreement about whose 
            side Dr. King would have taken, on the gay rights issue for example. 
            According to a recent story in the Financial Times, one member of 
            the family said he would have marched for gay rights. But a daughter 
            marching with another minister in Atlanta said he would not have. When many of us think of Dr. King, we focus on his 1963 "I Have A 
            Dream" speech, as though the words in that speech reflect the only 
            dream he had. King was a spiritual leader who had many beliefs. He 
            expressed some of them in his "Letter from the Birmingham Jail" and 
            in "Where Do We Go From Here." He expressed his views on education 
            when he said: "The discrimination of the future will not be based on 
            race but on education. Those without education will find no place in 
            our highly sophisticated, technical society." 
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            in this commentary] 
             | 
             Unfortunately, in this rush to fight for our own causes and 
            invoke the power of Dr. King, the man's own agenda too often gets 
            tossed aside. A closer look at his life and legacy tell us he had so 
            much more to say than just dreaming. Dreaming doesn't call for 
            leadership, and without a doubt he was a leader. At the age of 26, King received a Ph.D. in systematic theology 
            from Boston University. To fight for your dreams, you must be 
            equipped to do battle. Before the dream can come true, quality 
            education must be offered to every American child -- regardless of 
            race. Today, virtually every group in America that could possibly be 
            discriminated against has fought to become a protected class and 
            complains about injustice. But Dr. King wasn't a complainer. He was 
            a leader who realized that to get to an end, we must first make a 
            commitment to the means. King, in the end, was about "racial 
            freedom, economic justice and Christian love." [Lee 
            H. Walker] Lee H. Walker is the president of one of the nation's leading 
            black public policy think tanks, 
            The New Coalition for Economic 
            and 
            Social Change. He is also a member of the editorial board at The 
            Chicago Defender, the nation's only daily black newspaper. 
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