Geburtsdatum | Mittwoch, 08. Oktober 1941 |
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Beschreibung | Jesse Louis Jackson (geb. Burns; geboren am 8. Oktober 1941) ist ein amerikanischer politischer Aktivist, Baptistenprediger und Politiker. Er kandidierte 1984 und 1988 für die Präsidentschaftskandidatur der Demokraten und war von 1991 bis 1997 als Schattensenator für den District of Columbia tätig. Er ist der Gründer der Organisationen, die sich zu Rainbow/PUSH zusammengeschlossen haben. Der ehemalige US-Repräsentant Jesse Jackson Jr. ist sein ältester Sohn. Jackson moderierte von 1992 bis 2000 die Sendung Both Sides with Jesse Jackson auf CNN. |
I was extended secret service protection during my presidential run in 1984, when I received the most death threats ever made toward a candidate.
I am not a perfect servant. I am a public servant doing my best against the odds. As I develop and serve, be patient. God is not finished with me yet.
A man who cannot be enticed by money or intimidated by the threat of jail or death has two of the strongest weapons that anyone has to offer.
We've been so preoccupied with getting the government to behave in a fair and democratic way, we were not able to focus on the private sector where most of the jobs are, where most of the wealth and opportunities are.
I mean, the fight for a health care bill to cover all Americans and leave none behind is attacked as being a race appeal, which is not true, but then it's put out in the media as true.
We've removed the ceiling above our dreams. There are no more impossible dreams.
Leadership cannot just go along to get along. Leadership must meet the moral challenge of the day.
Time is neutral and does not change things. With courage and initiative, leaders change things.
Success needs no explanation. Failure does not have one that matters.
Leadership has a harder job to do than just choose sides. It must bring sides together.
Those who write the editorials and those who write the columns, they simply are unaccountable. They're free to impose their cultural politics in the name of freedom of the press.
In Afghanistan, there is a plan to build democracy hundreds of thousands of troops are protecting it. There is a plan to rebuild and reconstruct there. But many thousands of Americans die from violence and poverty every year and we don't have a plan for reconstruction at home.
Both tears and sweat are salty, but they render a different result. Tears will get you sympathy sweat will get you change.
So here we are today with a new conversation. When University of Georgia plays Georgia Tech, it's uniform color versus skin color. We have - we've overcome that level of racial fear.
No one should negotiate their dreams. Dreams must be free to fly high. No government, no legislature, has a right to limit your dreams. You should never agree to surrender your dreams.
On the political front, of course it's a zero-sum game. If it's all white males holding positions, you bring 10 women in, then it's, 'Women are coming!' Get 10 blacks and it's, 'Blacks are coming!' 'Hispanics are coming!' Zero-sum game. The seatmates might change but the chairs don't move. In the economy, the number of chairs can actually increase.
At the end of the day, we must go forward with hope and not backward by fear and division.
Many kids come out of college, they have a credit card and a diploma. They don't know how to buy a house or a car or health insurance or life insurance. They do not know basic microeconomics.
In many ways, history is marked as 'before' and 'after' Rosa Parks. She sat down in order that we all might stand up, and the walls of segregation came down.
A man must be willing to die for justice. Death is an inescapable reality and men die daily, but good deeds live forever.
Today's students can put dope in their veins or hope in their brains. If they can conceive it and believe it, they can achieve it. They must know it is not their aptitude but their attitude that will determine their altitude.
Your children need your presence more than your presents.
People internalize, from the jail to student loan debt, to credit card debt, to unemployment to the whole collective. It manifests itself in many ways, in people's home lives, domestic stuff.
Our dreams must be stronger than our memories. We must be pulled by our dreams, rater than pushed by our memories.
Urban America has been redlined. Government has not offered tax incentives for investment, as it has in a dozen foreign markets. Banks have redlined it. Industries have moved out, they've redlined it. Clearly, to break up the redlining process, there must be incentives to green-line with hedges against risk.
We have to judge politicians by their cumulative score. In one innings they make a great catch, in another they drop the ball. In one they score a home run, in another they strike out. But it is their cumulative batting average that we are interested in.