Previous Episode: Lost Summer

Fifty seven years after Martin Luther King, Jr. led the March on Washington for civil and voting rights legislation, protesters returned to the steps of the Lincoln Memorial last week to demand justice for African Americans killed by police. The event, organized by King's oldest son Martin the third and Reverend Al Sharpton, attracted tens of thousands of demonstrators including the families of several victims.

Between a global pandemic, outcry over the police-involved deaths of George Floyd and Jacob Blake and the attendant political fallout, the summer of 2020 isn't one that will soon be forgotten. Major Garrett explores how the civil rights movement of the 1960s led to the renewed push for equality today. How we got here. Where we're going. And what it means. 

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