What do you think about when you think of America? This ball is crushed. What words come to mind?
Justice? Freedom? Equality?
What about citizenship? To my fellow Americans, our newest Americans, what a remarkable journey all of you have made. The fabric of America is held together on the threads of these powerful ideas. People have fought and died over the definitions of these words.
But what do they really mean? What do we want? Citizens!
Every day as Americans, we are standing on the legacy of this fight. And we are challenged in every moment to live up to the promise of these ideals. For the 14th Amendment of the Constitution. We want the 14th Amendment to apply.
to women. The 14th Amendment is cited in more litigation than any other amendment. From its ratification to today, its relevance has never wavered. And yet, we barely know it exists.
What astound... me is that average ordinary Americans are unabashed about talking about their First Amendment rights. There are Americans for whom the Second Amendment that seems to be the most important to them and yet most of how we think about ourselves as Americans, most of what we're proudest of and most of the ways in which we believe we are free are embedded in the 14th Amendment.
So when I learned about it I just had to tell you this is why we're here. Amar? Action!
To tell our story. To tell its story. The story of the 14th Amendment. The 14th Amendment. It's okay if you don't know it by heart, but it is the center of the promise of America.
And it goes something like this. If you're born in the United States, you're a citizen. Pretty simple, right?
And under the law... Everyone in America gets this thing called equal protection. That means we all have the same rights and the same legal protection.
And no one can take those away without due process. That's your day in court. So basically, the 14th Amendment says we're all equal players on the same team.
And as simple as that sounds, it's revolutionary. It's what the American dream is made of. Were it not for the 14th Amendment, I would not be a citizen of the United States. Without the 14th Amendment, marriage equality probably still wouldn't exist. I am married to a white man, which would not at all be possible without the 14th Amendment.
The fundamental promise that the 14th Amendment presents to us is the promise of a society of equals. Growing up in Philly, my family was no stranger to the inequalities in this country. But despite their struggles, my parents and grandparents believed wholeheartedly in the promise of America. And I've seen firsthand how the 14th Amendment lays out the path towards the American dream.
At the heart of the 14th Amendment is the definition of citizenship in America. It is through this definition that all the rights we cherish are granted and defended. To tell this story, we've got to go back to a time before the 14th Amendment existed, before slavery was abolished in America.
We begin with one man, Frederick Douglass. Now, you may have heard his name before, but he is so much more than his killer fro. Frederick Douglass is born into slavery at a time when slavery has been a part of this land for almost 200 years. No one would expect Douglass to gain his freedom. much less lead a revolution.
Despite the risk of beating, or worse, Douglass breaks the law by teaching himself to read. And even though his first attempts to escape slavery fail, he doesn't give up. By the time he's 20 years old, he successfully escapes to New York City.
That's where we meet him. I'm in the great city of New York safe and sound Walking amid the hurrying throng and gazing amid the dazzling wonders of Broadway Dreams of my childhood now fulfilled Free state around me and free earth under my feet What a moment When Frederick Douglass arrives in the streets of lower Manhattan and escapes slave, he at first feels this indescribable euphoria, breathing free air the first time in his life. He tried to escape slavery before, and now he seems to finally have achieved his freedom.
And he bumps into this guy that he knows from Maryland who was also enslaved there, who Douglas knows as Jake. The guy says, that's not who I am anymore. He says, I'm William Dixon in New York. That Mr. Dixon tells him, don't trust anybody. Don't trust me.
I don't trust you. Anyone here can betray you. Dixon tells Douglas to keep your eyes peeled for slave catchers.
Be on your guard. Also, there are histories of black and white slave catching rings. It's really simple.
Douglas is worth a lot of money. Legally, someone owns him. And legally, that person has a claim on them, can send out slave catchers in pursuit of this property that they own. Price on their body. Price on their very existence.
And then... moment of his freedom he realizes he's not free. Now just because your society and your laws don't recognize you as a citizen it doesn't mean that a person throughout time doesn't declare that they have those rights.
Douglas was certainly one of those who claimed every right as a citizen despite the fact that the laws of his country Deny them. Prior to the 14th Amendment, there is an open and notorious question, what makes one a citizen of the United States? For African Americans, citizenship is a hotly debated, highly contentious, and very messy question.
Citizenship is the right to have rights. You have the right to participate. You've got the right to vote. You've got the right to be able to call on the government and also to get protections against the government.
All the things that we naturally take for granted, the benefit of all the laws, protection from violence, people prosecuted if they do something to us. If you're not a citizen, then you can't take advantage of those. I spent the day gathering flowers. and weaving them into festoons while the dead body of my father was lying within a mile of me what cared my owners for that he was merely a piece of property moreover they thought he had spoiled his children by teaching them to feel that they were human beings this was blasphemous doctrine for a slave to teach presumptuous in him and dangerous to the masters. You never knew what it is to be a slave, to be entirely unprotected by law or custom, to have the laws reduce you to the condition of a chattel, entirely subject to the will of another.
There were people who said, well, citizenship belongs only to white people. The United States of America did not intend for people of color. to be included in that definition.
Remarkably, the founders don't think very hard about citizenship at all. The original Constitution is kind of silent on the subject of citizenship. It doesn't have any statement of how someone becomes a citizen or who is a citizen or who isn't. In that space of having this undefined term, citizen, racism was allowed to flourish.
All Men Are Created Equal is a... founding ideal of the United States Constitution. We today understand that it was an ideal, a kind of embedded in the Constitution, but not at all a reality.
The Constitution talks a big game about freedom, blah, blah, liberty, blah, blah, more perfect union, but it also has the three-fifths compromise. It starts off fine. We're basing representatives on total number of free persons.
Cool, cool. Excluding Indians. Not cool.
And three-fifths of all other persons. Other persons is the constitutional way of saying urban. Now imagine that. Three-fifths a person. No, nothing to see here.
We're just fractioning humanity. How did this happen? Well, the South wanted more representation, so they argued that slaves deserve representation, but not rights. Um, you just fought a revolutionary war about all this mess. How do you not see the irony in that?
The majority of the first 16 presidents were slave owners. No wonder slavery didn't just die out on its own. And it also gave slaveholders a legal argument that the Constitution approves of slavery, of treating human beings like property before the law.
We had a country founded on both the Declaration of Independence and the institution of slavery. And so for enslaved persons, they're citizens in the sense of being humans of moral worth and dignity, but they weren't citizens in the legal sense. Some abolitionists, like Frederick Douglass, have this dangerous idea that enslaved people are actually citizens.
So what's next? They set out to see if they can stir up public support for this idea. Blacks born free in the North, like Francis Harper, share the story of oppression through essays and poetry.
We are all bound up together in one great bundle of humanity, and society cannot trample on the weakest of its members without receiving the curse in its own soul. They also, like Maria Stewart, lectured publicly on anti-slavery. It is not the color of the skin that makes the man, but it is the principles formed within the soul.
Harriet Jacobs and her brother John Jacobs exposed their experiences with slavery to provoke Americans'intent. action. All men are created free and equal by their maker and endowed with certain inalienable rights.
We're the colored man's rights in today's America. The abolitionist movement is a fascinating part of American history that people don't fully understand in part because it was so diverse. One branch of the abolitionist movement really believed the constitution is evil, the constitution is pro-slavery.
They said that the U.S. Constitution was a covenant with death and an agreement with hell. They said what needed to happen was a destruction of the Constitution.
Let's dissolve the Union. But there was another wing, and the most famous member of that was Frederick Douglass. Douglass'first autobiography is certainly a risky project. Risky as an enslaved person, as a fugitive, to advertise oneself.
He himself is still, in a formal legal sense, a slave. He is a person with a price rather than a free man. It became a classic instantaneously, and it still is.
It's now read all over the world. It was critical at that time to have someone like Frederick Douglass, a black man who had been a slave, who could talk personally about the experience of slavery, who could talk about it from a human dimension. He often said that his greatest fear during slavery was less the danger to his body than the danger to his mind.
The internalization of the idea that some people are somehow born to be free and others are born to be slaves. There is a moment in his first autobiography where he just stops asking, Why am I a slave? It's an ancient existential question. Why am I a slave when these other white children I see are free to grow up?
Free to have books, free to be educated, free to roam and travel. Why am I a slave? He's felt what it's like.
The brutality of enslavement, the exploitation. He has decided that he's going to fight. I belong. He travels all over the world speaking about his experience as a slave, speaking about the need for black freedom.
That is the cause to which he devotes his life. He had a talent, he had a gift to get up and speak. Probably the greatest orator of the 19th century. I'm a black man in a white robe. He was so impressive that the southern apologists kept spreading these rumors that he'd never really been a slave, that he had been brought in from some other country, that he was an actor.
Well, there's no question about it. about whether he wrote it himself. From 1848 on, he continues to bolster his public profile. He publishes the North Star, really incredibly popular among white abolitionists. There's this argument that Douglass is making that he'll continue to make for a transition from slave to citizen.
1852, Frederick Douglass is probably the most famous black person in the world. He understood that what he said was tremendously consequential for the strategy that would be taken by the anti-slavery movement. His argument was the Constitution is an anti-slavery document.
It's pro-freedom. He thought that the United States, with its Declaration of Independence and with its revolutionary tradition, that slavery was not something that should be tolerated. According to Douglass, the founding fathers had not created a document that enshrined slavery, but in fact had created a document that guaranteed to every man the right of self-governance, of liberty, and of human rights.
He did believe and wanted to believe that people like him really were part of the national community. The Ladies'Anti-Slavery Society of Rochester, New York invited Frederick Douglass to speak on the 4th of July. 600 people came to Corinthian Hall for this event.
But his audience was not just the 600 people in the hall that day. His audience was us. His audience was the future.
Let me set the stage for you. Those 600 people in the audience are mostly white men and women. They generally agree with Frederick Douglass, but Douglass knows there's a difference between agreeing in theory and understanding deeply the reality on the ground. In order to really make them see, he's got to tell them the truth about themselves in 1852. This could get interesting. Fellow citizens, the signers of the Declaration of Independence were brave men.
Your fathers succeeded. And today, you reap the fruits of that success. Douglas makes his audience feel very comfortable about the 4th of July.
He says the founding fathers were geniuses. They created this beautiful thing called the American Republic. It's a very calm opening.
And then there's a moment where he says, pardon me. Why am I called upon to speak here today? What have I, or those who I represent, to do with your national independence? The 4th of July is yours, not mine. You may rejoice.
I must mourn. Do you mean citizens to mock me by asking me to speak here today? And then he blasts away at his audience with a litany of the terrors and horrors of the slave trade, slave auctions in the American South.
He makes his audience feel their own senses. He tells them what the whole of a slave ship smelled like. He tells them the sounds and the feelings of a woman weeping as her child was sold.
He takes them to the... horrible heart of what slavery actually is. To rob them of their liberty, to work them without wages, to be them with sticks to flay their flesh with lash to knock out their teeth to burn their flesh your shouts of liberty and equality your sermons and thanksgivings are mere hypocrisy there is not a nation on earth guilty of practices more shocking and bloody than are the people of the united states at this very hour He's speaking to the people who are on his side and saying, you're not on my side enough. You're not doing enough to fight slavery. It's 1852. I've been free for 14 years, but this is still going on.
This is a nation that's supposed to be built around freedom, built around concepts of human equality. As long as slavery persists, the nation is a lie. America is false to the past.
False to the present and solemnly binds herself to be false to the future. Allow me to say in conclusion, I do not despair of this country. The doom of slavery is certain and I therefore leave off where I began with hope. I think he considers himself a citizen. The question is whether the government considers him a citizen.
That's really the key thing. I think for so many people, so many African Americans, we've always thought of ourselves as being citizens. We've always thought about the United States as being our country.
The question is whether the country has thought about us that way back. The United States Supreme Court is housed in this magnificent white marble edifice. Equal justice under law. The language of the Constitution isn't always crystal clear. And that's one reason why we have the Supreme Court.
Part of its job is to interpret, to help make sense of what the Constitution means and then hold us all accountable to it. It's our third branch of government and the ultimate authority of our judicial system. So what did the Supreme Court do? Supreme Court have to say about who is or is not an American citizen.
1857, Dred Scott versus Sanford. Dred Scott's the worst decision ever made by the Supreme Court, and the only debate is the worst of the second worst. Dred Scott is enslaved to a surgeon. The surgeon had brought Scott on a job from the slave state of Missouri into Wisconsin, which was a free state.
Later, back in Missouri, the doctor died. Eventually, Scott goes to the Supreme Court arguing that once he had lived in a free state, he was no longer property and became a free citizen. If the court rules in favor of Dred Scott, enslaved people would have a clear path to become free citizens.
If they rule against, the door is closed. We think Negroes are not included and were not intended to be included under the word citizens in the Constitution and can therefore claim none of the rights and privileges which that instrument provides for and secures to the citizens of the United States. The court says we're going to go back to the framing of the Constitution and ask ourselves what did those people intend in 1787? It's obvious to me, Roger B. Taney, they didn't want black people as part of their country. They didn't put it in the Constitution because it just would never have occurred to them that anyone would be stupid enough to allow non-whites into the American body politic.
They had for more than a century before been regarded as beings of an inferior order and altogether unfit to... to associate with the white race, and so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect. Its rhetoric is bone-chilling. African Americans are indeed not citizens, never were, never can be.
It affirmed the idea that no matter what their status, free or enslaved, black people were not equal to white people. They were not fully human. They were not...
evolved. Dred Scott case announces that black people can never be citizens of the United States. Dred Scott himself never even had the right to sue.
Frederick Douglass had insisted anti-slavery politics could operate in harmony with the Constitution, but the court seemed to leave no way forward. He said, no, the Constitution is completely pro-slavery. The Constitution is totally anti-Douglas, if you will.
Citizenship is the locus of rights. After Dred Scott, Douglas can never be part of this community, never be an American citizen. So the question then became, what's the next step?
The South wants the stamp of national approval on slavery. He can't have it. Lincoln was a big critic of that case. That was partly what he ran on, if it were not for the reaction to Dred Scott.
Many people think that he would not have become the president. And you will be the greatest president in all of his land. Lincoln also saw the country moving to fight over this question.
of the legality of slavery. So Lincoln understands that slavery is bad, which is a good start. But he says that if I could save the Union without freeing any slaves, I would do so. If the Civil War is over slavery, then why doesn't Lincoln immediately free all the enslaved people in the South?
Because his goal is preserving the Union. The South has just seceded. They're calling themselves the Confederacy now.
Lincoln. is not going to be the president that straight up loses half the country. He has got to get the South back. And at this point, he'll do whatever it takes to win, even if it's at the expense of black Americans. In the midst of all the chaos, Abraham Lincoln invited a small group of African-American leaders to the White House.
He has stenographers in the press there to record this. And in effect, Lincoln did not have a discussion with them. He gave them a lecture.
Your race are suffering, in my judgment, the greatest wrong inflicted on any people. But even when you cease to be slaves, you are yet far removed from being placed on an equality with the white race. I do not like where this is going. Consider what we know to be the truth, but for your race, among us, there could not be war.
He basically blames the presence of black people in America for the Civil War. And then he wants to get them to endorse a plan to quote-unquote colonize freed black people outside the United States. There is an unwillingness on the part of our people, harsh as it may be, for you free colored people to remain with us. It is better for us both, therefore, to be separated.
Whoa, time out. You're Abraham Lincoln, right? The dude on the penny?
Okay, keep going. He's saying we all understand that equality is what this country is supposed to be about, but really, racial equality is not going to happen, so get with the program. The place I am thinking about having for a colony is Central America.
What? Wait. The enlightened, progressive president who ultimately ended slavery first wanted to send black Americans to Costa Rica?
Por qué? Douglas is, he's outraged. Part of what Lincoln is doing here is trying to get at that gnawing uncertainty in black people that maybe we can't actually belong in this country.
This is what African Americans fear might be their fate if, in fact, they are not citizens. Douglas responded and said, no, it is not the presence of black people, it is slavery. The power that slave owners have and the way it warps the whole society, that is the cause of the Civil War. This was all in the midst, we have to remember, of all-out Civil War. And that summer, his side is not winning the war.
In a war like that, you needed every soldier you could get. But the government kept insisting that blacks could not be in the militia, they couldn't be in the regular army. You know, they're savages, they'll run amok, they'll try to give them arms, they'll massacre every white person they see.
Why does the government reject the Negro? Is he not a man? Our generals are calling for men.
Send us men, they scream. I have implored the imperiled nation to unchain against her foes her powerful black hand. Liberty won by white men would lose half its luster. Who would be free themselves must strike the blow. Douglas makes the case that if black men go to war and bleed for their country...
That they could never then be denied the rights of citizenship. He makes that point explicitly. He toured the country giving speeches. You couldn't win the war without abolishing slavery.
You couldn't win the war without enlisting black soldiers into the Civil War, into the Union Army. He's trying to manipulate Lincoln to invite black people to join this fight against the slave owners. Douglas is convinced they will prove they are citizens, that they're deserving of rights, and that they're deserving of legal equality.
He couldn't at this point really conceive of the United States as a biracial society. But his views will begin to move forward very, very dramatically. Finally, Frederick Douglass'efforts work. Desperate for soldiers, Lincoln signs the Emancipation Proclamation, freeing enslaved Americans in the southern states.
Now black men can join the Union Army. These black soldiers get to prove what Frederick Douglass has been saying all along. They want to fight for their freedom.
The whole world's ours. Our world. It's time we show them the power. The world is ours.
The Emancipation Proclamation is a critical turning point in the war. Adding, and by the end, 200,000 black men to the Union Army and Navy. It was not just a war of small battles and regular armies fighting.
It was mass armies, both North and South. The Emancipation Proclamation is issued as a military order. It's to help win the war.
We were supposed to be lazy. We were supposed to be cowardly. We were supposed to be undisciplined.
And so to have... African-Americans serve and serve nobly was such a powerful repose to those narratives that were being advanced It was powerful for black people to be on the front to shed blood black service in the military began to change white racial attitudes. Many, many Northerners who had never thought about blacks as being citizens believed that by their service in the Army, they have earned the right to be equal citizens of the United States. To a Frederick Douglass, his sons serve in the 54th Massachusetts Colored Infantry. He saw the tremendous real and symbolic power of black men putting, as he said, The label U.S. on their belt.
We want a country which shall not brand the Declaration of Independence as a lie. The mission of this war is national regeneration. Since the start of the war, Douglas is saying that the war would not only transform black people's lives, but transform the United States as a whole.
We are not fighting for the old union as it was, but for something 10,000 times more important than that thing crisply rendered. This national unity, a unity of which the great principles of liberty and equality and not slavery and class superiority are the cornerstone. He's defining the Civil War.
The country is destined, that it's essential that the country will live up to the creed of its founding documents. The war must end not only with the defeat of the Confederacy, but with a new nation being created, one based now on equality. Part of the hardship of the Civil War is seeing how many people are dying, and Lincoln is having to grapple with the question of why. Four score and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
A way to think about Gettysburg is that it's an echo of what Douglass has been saying. Emancipation is the definition of the war effort. This nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom. Lincoln's most famous line here, a new birth of freedom, that's something that Douglass had been saying since the start of the war. And that's rhetoric not that...
dissimilar from what Douglas talks about, national regeneration, a new birth of freedom. Both of them now are seeing the Civil War as creating something new. And that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.
Part of what he's doing in Gettysburg is helping himself grapple with the tragedy, the human cost of the war. If this is a war about the Union, then maybe too many people have died. But if this is a war about emancipation, if this is a war for black freedom, then maybe Gettysburg is worth it.
This is where I think Lincoln becomes so compelling, is that you really see how much a person can change. For Lincoln to go from urging colonization to talking about black people's future is incredible. I think they came to respect one another very deeply. They were both...
Self-made men. Lincoln had one year of formal schooling, Douglass had none. Both of them had risen to prominence through their wits, through their mind.
Whatever they became, they made themselves into. And I think they were kind of kindred spirits in that respect. Douglass is feeling really optimistic that he can continue to work with Lincoln toward a black American future.
On April 9th, 1865, General Lee of the Confederacy surrenders to the Union, marking the beginning of the end of the Civil War. Sometimes history appoints certain people, like Douglass, to be the voice of a movement. And when they can find an advocate like President Lincoln, who's willing to listen and change, it's incredible to see what those leaders can accomplish together. Unfortunately, History can also cut those relationships tragically short.
In celebration of Lee's surrender, Lincoln gave a speech to say that African-American soldiers who had served in the Union Army ought to be given the right to vote. One of the people in the crowd that day listening to the speech was John Wilkes Booth. Booth was upset at the idea of equal citizenship, and he... turned to a friend and said that's the last speech that he'll ever make Eight months after Lincoln's assassination, the 13th Amendment is ratified, finally abolishing slavery, permanently freeing every enslaved person in America. But freedom isn't the end of the story.
So we think of the assassination of Lincoln as a great tragedy, and it is, but the real tragedy is that his assassination means that the presidency passes to Andrew Johnson. This is a country for white men, and by God, as long as I am president, it shall be a government for white men. He is reactionary, he is racist, he is bigoted, he is as far from Lincoln as the sun is from the moon.
He loved the idea of big rallies, he loved to get up and make long speeches, largely about himself. You know, I think we've all seen political figures like this at various points in history. Once he becomes president, he more or less says up front that his goal is to prevent the dilution of citizenship.
Frederick Douglass went to the White House to visit his president. It was a terrible moment. Andrew Johnson makes very clear that he thinks that Frederick Douglass is beneath him. He thinks that black people should be grateful to him. I've owned slaves and I have bought slaves, but I've never sold one.
Practically, so far as my connection with slaves has gone. I've been their slave instead of their being mine. After the meeting with Frederick Douglass, Johnson said to his secretary...
I know that damn Douglass. He's like any other nigger. He would sooner cut a white man's throat than not.
You're not likely to get Andrew Johnson supporting vigorous enforcement of the rights of the former slaves, which, of course, he did not do. I get it. Johnson's a racist. But having a racist president shouldn't hurt black people now that slavery's been abolished. Sorry Johnson, if you really hated black people so much, you shouldn't have joined the union.
Too late now. But hold on. Just because you're free doesn't mean you're a citizen. And without citizenship, black folks have no recourse against southern attacks on black freedom.
As soon as the 13th is passed, state legislatures across the South pass Black Codes. And while the name Black Code sounds like an amazing new Shonda Rhimes show, it's anything but. We're talking about laws. See, many of these laws require black people, and only black people, to sign year-long labor contracts with white employers and tax them up to $100 for taking employment as anything other than a farmer or a servant.
And they even force black children into mandatory apprenticeships to keep them in the labor force. Kids! And sure, while the North is outraged, these Southern legislatures basically say, what are you talking about? Black codes aren't slavery. It's an entirely different word.
It's two words even! Look, they're getting paid now. Right.
But guess what happens if a black person refuses these new restrictions? What happens if they try to exercise their freedom? Well, they could be taken to jail and, surprise, surprise, forced into labor. Without pay.
The New York Herald Tribune even runs this headline. South Carolina reestablishing slavery. Can you imagine? Black folks just fought and won an entire war for their freedom and this is what they get? Clearly the 13th Amendment isn't going to cut it.
The question is, what will? Enter John Bingham, an Ohio congressman. Bingham believes in freedom for everyone.
True freedom. I take exception to the abuse of the word nigger. To me, it does not denote color of skin, but designates a class of creatures by the color of their souls.
Those who set their feet upon defenseless fellow men and convert them into what we call a slave. These man-stealers, though their skins be as white as the driven snow, are the real niggers. He's looking at what's happening in the South and he's like, y'all, it's not looking too good down there.
He's like, we have to do something. We have to amend the Constitution, provide them equal citizenship. John Bingham, among others, led the way to argue for and craft the heart of the 14th Amendment. What Bingham wants is to do exactly what Frederick Douglass called for in his Fourth of July speech. Make America live up to its promise.
To expand American citizenship in the Constitution. To right the wrongs of Dred Scott and secure the blessings of equality for all in writing so no one can ever take them away. To do that, Bingham and a group of radical Republicans build 14... to include many of the rights that were denied to black Americans.
And they fight to make 14 a constitutional amendment. That's important because they understand that they're not always going to be in charge. The next guys might want it gone. Now, amendments are extremely difficult to pass, but they're also very hard to get rid of. And Bingham succeeds.
In 1868, the 14th Amendment officially becomes a part of the Constitution. And it proves that the United States is on board with this new mission of equality for all. All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof. are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside.
If you look at the language, it's quite striking. Person born in the United States, and there's no other restriction. It doesn't say a white person born in the United States.
Therefore, people of African descent are citizens. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States. United States. What this means is that the first eight amendments to the U.S. Constitution, what we call the Bill of Rights, all citizens have those rights and they have them against state governments as well as against the federal government.
Nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law. Black people from the antebellum period have been trying to use courts to get what they want. They want to be able to defend themselves against violence. And now the 14th Amendment says that, yes, you can go to court if something happens. Nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
Citizenship. becomes so clearly delineated that citizenship was automatic, that full citizenship, not three-fifths, not conditional. The moment you breathe that first breath of American air, you're an American. If you are born here, you are born with all of the liberties and the protections of U.S. citizenship. That overturns the Dred Scott decision, which said that black people could not be citizens.
No matter where they were born, even if they've been here for generations. The 14th Amendment is absolutely pivotal in moving us from a white male nation into a future in which there was a possibility for diversity within our democracy. The 14th Amendment also includes the first time that the word equal is used in the Constitution.
And it becomes enshrined in our Constitution. In a lot of ways, our country wasn't founded in 1776. It was founded when John Bingham and the Congress passes the 14th Amendment, because that's the modern Constitution. Douglas and others recognize that the 14th Amendment has changed the way the nation's laws will work. It's not viewed uncritically, but it is cause of tremendous celebration. This is a moment of incredible optimism.
African Americans are filled with this excitement about what it means to be full citizens after the passage of the 14th Amendment. There is this... belief and excitement that we've hit the reset button on a badly mismanaged project.
And America is now going to step into her own. One of the biggest successes is the flourishing of Black education. People in the South build up institutions for their own education because of the importance of literacy.
Black people spend a few million dollars of their own money for education. And these are people in the South. who had no money. Frederick Douglass, you just say his name and to me it's like a prayer.
He was remarkable in that he had an aptitude that could not be contained. He didn't want black people to just be free from slavery, he wanted them to be full citizens. What an extraordinary man and human being. I seem to be living in a new world. Who could have imagined what has occurred?
The great triumph of justice and liberty, not only for the slave emancipated, but a civil rights bill, the right to vote. All for a class stigmatized but a little while ago as worthless goods and chattel, but now regarded as men, recognized as such before the law. Frederick Douglass. Enslaved person.
Fugitive. Free non-citizen. Citizen.
But his incredible journey doesn't end there. Throughout his long life, Frederick Douglass would continue to champion the rights of Black Americans, women, and immigrants. And the impact of his fight has echoed through generations.
even today. These images show the crane and a flatbed truck removing the statue of Roger B. Tawney in the wee hours of the morning Friday. So he said blacks were so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect. So we asked that night for forgiveness and the Scots embraced us and forgave us.
There were people in my family who said, I don't know if I want to meet those people. And the unexpected... and found to apology was given, I have cousins who are in tears.
When that starts to happen and get to that level of understanding a relationship, other things start to become possible. So we can all do something. If the Scots and the Tawnys can reconcile, can't you? We talk about equality a lot in America. We talk about justice.
We have a Pledge of Allegiance that has these words. And the 14th Amendment was intended to make that vision real. What we didn't account for is how unprepared we were. were to actually embrace true equality. I pledge that I will never accept the false teachings that all races are equal.
All we say to America is be true to what you said on paper. As soon as the 14th is ratified, it's attacked. In the courts, in the streets, even in our history books.
Why haven't we learned the story of the 14th Amendment? Because there are a lot of people out there who fought very hard to make sure you'd never know.