美国20世纪伟大的100篇演讲Jesse Jackson - 1988 DNC Address
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    AmericanRhetoric.com


    Jesse Jackson

    Address to
    the
    Democratic
    National
    Convention


    delivered
    19
    July
    1988, Omni Coliseum,
    Atlanta
    GA

    AUTHENTICITY CERTIFIED:
    Text
    version below
    transcribed
    directly
    from
    audio

    Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

    Tonight, we pause and give praise and honor to
    God for being good enough
    to allow
    us to be
    at this place at this time. When I look out at
    this convention, I see the face of America: Red,
    Yellow, Brown, Black and White. We are all precious in God's sight the
    real rainbow
    coalition.

    All of us all
    of us who are here think that we are seated.
    But we're really standing on
    someone's shoulders. Ladies and gentlemen, Mrs. Rosa Parks the
    mother of the civil rights
    movement.

    [Mrs. Rosa Parks is brought to the podium.]

    I want
    to express my deep love and appreciation for the support
    my family has given me over
    these past
    months. They have endured pain, anxiety, threat, and fear. But they have been
    strengthened and made secure by our faith
    in God, in America, and in you. Your love has
    protected us and made us strong. To my wife Jackie, the foundation of our family. to our five
    children whom you met
    tonight. to
    my mother, Mrs. Helen Jackson, who
    is present
    tonight.
    and to our grandmother, Mrs. Matilda
    Burns. to
    my brother Chuck and his family. to my
    motherinlaw,
    Mrs. Gertrude Brown, who just last
    month at age 61
    graduated from Hampton
    Institute a
    marvelous achievement.

    I offer my appreciation
    to Mayor Andrew
    Young who has provided
    such gracious hospitality to
    all of us this week.


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    And a special salute to President Jimmy Carter. President Carter restored honor to
    the White
    House after Watergate.
    He gave many of us a special opportunity to grow. For his kind words,
    for his unwavering commitment
    to peace in the world, and for the voters that came from his
    family, every member of his family, led by Billy
    and Amy, I offer my special
    thanks to the
    Carter
    family.

    My right and my privilege to stand here before you has been won, won
    in my lifetime, by the
    blood and the sweat of the innocent.

    Twentyfour
    years ago, the late Fannie Lou
    Hamer and Aaron
    Henry who
    sits here tonight
    from Mississippi were
    locked out onto
    the streets in Atlantic City. the head of the Mississippi
    Freedom Democratic Party.

    But
    tonight, a
    Black and White delegation
    from Mississippi is headed by Ed Cole, a Black man
    from Mississippi. twentyfour
    years later.

    Many were lost in the struggle for the right to
    vote: Jimmy Lee Jackson, a young student,
    gave his life. Viola Liuzzo, a
    White mother from Detroit, called "nigger lover," and brains
    blown out at point blank range. [Michael] Schwerner, [Andrew] Goodman and [James]
    Chaney two
    Jews and a Black found
    in a common grave, bodies riddled with bullets in
    Mississippi. the four darling little girls in a church
    in Birmingham, Alabama. They died that we
    might have a right to live.


    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. lies only a few miles from us tonight. Tonight he must
    feel good as
    he looks down upon
    us. We sit
    here together, a
    rainbow, a coalition
    the
    sons and daughters
    of slavemasters and the sons and daughters of slaves, sitting together around a common
    table, to decide the direction of our party and our country. His heart would be full
    tonight.

    As a testament
    to
    the struggles of those who have gone before. as a legacy for those who will
    come after. as a tribute to the endurance, the patience, the courage of our forefathers and
    mothers. as an assurance that
    their prayers are being answered, that
    their work has not been
    in vain, and,
    that
    hope is eternal, tomorrow
    night my name will go
    into
    nomination
    for the
    Presidency of the United States of America.


    We meet
    tonight at
    the crossroads, a point of decision. Shall we expand, be inclusive, find
    unity and power. or suffer division and impotence?

    We've come to
    Atlanta,
    the cradle of the Old South, the crucible of the New
    South. Tonight,
    there is a sense of celebration, because we are moved, fundamentally moved from racial
    battlegrounds by law, to economic common ground. Tomorrow we'll challenge to move to
    higher ground.


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    Common ground. Think of Jerusalem, the intersection where many trails met. A small village
    that became the birthplace for three great religions Judaism,
    Christianity, and Islam. Why
    was this village so blessed? Because it provided
    a crossroads where different people met,
    different
    cultures, different civilizations could meet and find common ground.
    When people
    come together, flowers always flourish
    the
    air is rich with the aroma of a new spring.


    Take New
    York, the dynamic metropolis. What
    makes New York so
    special? It's the invitation
    at the Statue of Liberty, "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses who yearn
    to
    breathe free." Not restricted to
    English only. Many people,
    many cultures, many languages
    with one thing in common: They yearn to breathe free. Common ground.


    Tonight in Atlanta,
    for the first
    time in
    this century, we convene in the South. a state where
    Governors once stood in school
    house doors. where Julian Bond was denied a seat
    in the
    State Legislature because of his conscientious objection
    to the Vietnam
    War. a city that,
    through its five Black Universities, has graduated more black students than any city in the
    world. Atlanta, now a modern
    intersection of the New South.

    Common ground. That's the challenge of our party tonight left
    wing,
    right wing.


    Progress will
    not
    come through boundless liberalism nor static conservatism, but at the critical
    mass of mutual survival not
    at boundless liberalism nor static conservatism, but at
    the
    critical
    mass of mutual survival. It
    takes two wings to
    fly.
    Whether you're a hawk or a dove,
    you're just a bird living in
    the same environment, in
    the same world.


    The Bible teaches that when
    lions and lambs lie
    down together, none will
    be afraid, and there
    will be peace in the valley. It
    sounds impossible. Lions eat lambs. Lambs sensibly flee from
    lions. Yet
    even
    lions and lambs find common ground. Why? Because neither lions nor lambs
    want
    the forest
    to catch on fire. Neither lions nor lambs want acid rain to
    fall. Neither lions nor
    lambs can survive nuclear war. If lions and lambs can find common ground, surely we can as
    well
    as
    civilized people.


    The only time that we win
    is when we come together. In
    1960, John Kennedy,
    the late John
    Kennedy, beat Richard Nixon by only 112,000 votes less
    than one vote per precinct. He
    won by the margin of our hope. He brought
    us together. He reached out. He had
    the courage
    to defy his advisors and inquire about Dr.
    King's jailing in Albany, Georgia.
    We won by the
    margin of our hope,
    inspired by courageous leadership.
    In 1964, Lyndon Johnson brought
    both wings together the
    thesis, the antithesis, and the creative synthesis and
    together
    we won. In
    1976, Jimmy Carter unified us again, and we won. When do we not come
    together, we never win. In
    1968, the division and despair in July led to our defeat
    in
    November. In 1980, rancor in the spring and the summer led to Reagan
    in the fall. When we
    divide, we cannot win. We must find common ground as the basis for survival and
    development and change and growth.

    Today when we debated, differed, deliberated, agreed
    to
    agree, agreed
    to disagree, when we
    had
    the good judgment
    to argue a case and then
    not
    selfdestruct,
    George Bush was just a
    little further away from the White House and a little closer to private life.


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    Tonight, I salute Governor Michael Dukakis. He has run He
    has run a wellmanaged
    and a
    dignified campaign. No matter how tired or how
    tried, he always resisted the temptation to
    stoop to demagoguery.

    I've watched a good mind fast at work, with
    steel
    nerves, guiding his campaign out of the
    crowded field without appeal
    to the worst
    in
    us. I've watched his perspective grow as his
    environment has expanded. I've seen
    his toughness and tenacity close up. I
    know
    his
    commitment
    to public service. Mike Dukakis' parents were a doctor and a teacher. my parents
    a maid,
    a beautician, and a janitor. There's a great gap between Brookline, Massachusetts and
    Haney Street in the Fieldcrest
    Village housing projects in Greenville,
    South Carolina.


    He studied law. I studied theology.
    There are differences of religion, region, and race.
    differences in experiences and perspectives. But the genius of America is that out of the many
    we become one.

    Providence has enabled our paths to
    intersect. His foreparents came to America on immigrant
    ships. my foreparents came to
    America on slave ships.
    But whatever the original
    ships, we're
    in the same boat tonight.

    Our ships could pass in the night if
    we have a false sense of independence or
    they could
    collide and crash. We would lose our passengers. We can seek a high reality and a greater
    good. Apart, we can drift on the broken pieces of Reagonomics, satisfy our baser instincts,
    and exploit
    the fears of our people. At our highest, we can call upon
    noble instincts and
    navigate this vessel
    to safety. The greater good is the common good.


    As Jesus said, "Not My will, but
    Thine be done." It was his way of saying there's a higher good
    beyond personal
    comfort or position.

    The good of our Nation
    is at stake. It's commitment to working men and women, to the poor
    and the vulnerable,
    to
    the many in the world.


    With so
    many guided missiles, and so much
    misguided leadership, the stakes are exceedingly
    high. Our choice? Full participation
    in a democratic government, or more abandonment and
    neglect. And so this night, we choose not a false sense of independence, not our capacity to
    survive and endure. Tonight we choose interdependency, and our capacity to act and unite for
    the greater good.


    Common good is finding commitment
    to new priorities to expansion and inclusion. A
    commitment
    to expanded participation
    in the Democratic Party at every level. A commitment
    to a shared national campaign strategy and involvement at every level.

    A commitment
    to
    new priorities that insure that hope will be kept alive. A common ground
    commitment
    to a legislative agenda for empowerment, for the John Conyers bill universal,
    onsite,
    sameday
    registration everywhere.


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    A commitment
    to D.C. statehood and empowerment D.
    C. deserves statehood. A
    commitment
    to economic setasides,
    commitment to
    the Dellums bill for comprehensive
    sanctions against South
    Africa.
    A shared commitment
    to a common direction.

    Common ground.


    Easier said than done.
    Where do you find common ground? At
    the point of challenge.
    This
    campaign
    has shown
    that politics need not be marketed by politicians, packaged by pollsters
    and pundits. Politics can be a moral arena where people come together to find common
    ground.


    We find common ground at the plant
    gate that closes on workers without
    notice. We find
    common ground at
    the farm auction, where a good farmer loses his or her land to bad loans
    or diminishing markets. Common ground at the
    school yard where teachers cannot get
    adequate pay, and students cannot get a scholarship, and can't make a loan. Common ground
    at the hospital admitting room, where somebody tonight is dying because they cannot afford
    to go upstairs to a bed that's empty waiting for someone with insurance to get
    sick. We are a
    better nation than that. We must
    do better.

    Common ground.
    What
    is leadership if not present
    help in a time of crisis? And so I
    met you
    at the point of challenge.
    In Jay, Maine, where paper workers were striking for fair wages. in
    Greenville,
    Iowa, where family farmers struggle
    for a fair price. in Cleveland, Ohio, where
    working women seek comparable worth. in McFarland, California, where the children of
    Hispanic farm workers may be dying from poisoned land, dying in clusters with cancer. in an
    AIDS hospice in Houston, Texas, where the sick support one another, too often rejected by
    their own parents and friends.

    Common ground. America is not a blanket woven from one thread, one color, one cloth. When
    I was a child growing up in Greenville, South Carolina and grandmamma could not afford a
    blanket, she didn't complain and we did not
    freeze. Instead she took pieces of old cloth patches,
    wool, silk, gabardine, crockersack only
    patches, barely good enough
    to wipe off
    your shoes with. But they didn't stay that way very long.
    With
    sturdy hands and a strong cord,
    she sewed them together into a quilt, a
    thing of
    beauty and power and culture. Now,
    Democrats, we must build such a quilt.

    Farmers, you seek fair prices and you are right
    but
    you cannot
    stand alone.
    Your patch is
    not big enough.

    Workers, you fight for fair wages,
    you are right
    but
    your patch
    labor is not big enough.

    Women, you seek comparable worth and pay equity, you are right
    but
    your patch is not big
    enough.

    Women, mothers, who seek Head Start, and day care and prenatal
    care on
    the front side of
    life, relevant jail care and welfare on the back side of life, you are right but
    your patch
    is
    not big enough.


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    Students, you seek scholarships, you are right but
    your patch
    is not big enough.

    Blacks and Hispanics, when we fight for civil rights, we are right but
    our patch
    is not big
    enough.

    Gays and lesbians, when
    you
    fight against discrimination and a cure for AIDS, you are right but
    your patch is not big enough.

    Conservatives and progressives, when you fight
    for what you believe, right wing,
    left wing,
    hawk, dove, you are right
    from your point of view, but your point of view is not enough.

    But don't despair. Be as wise as my grandmamma. Pull the patches and the pieces together,
    bound by a common
    thread. When we form a great quilt of unity and common ground, we'll
    have the power to bring about health
    care and housing and jobs and education and hope to
    our Nation.

    We,
    the people, can win.

    We stand at
    the end of a long dark night of reaction. We stand tonight
    united in the
    commitment
    to a new direction. For almost eight years we've been led by those who view
    social good coming from private interest, who view public life as a means to increase private
    wealth. They have been prepared to sacrifice the common good of the many to satisfy
    the
    private interests and the wealth of a few.

    We believe in a government
    that's a tool of our democracy in
    service to the public, not an
    instrument of the aristocracy in search of private wealth. We believe in government with
    the
    consent of the governed, "of, for and by the people." We must now emerge into
    a new day
    with a new
    direction.

    Reaganomics: Based on the belief that the rich
    had
    too much money [sic] too
    little money
    and the poor had too
    much. That's classic Reaganomics. They believe that the poor had
    too
    much
    money and the rich
    had
    too little money,so
    they engaged in
    reverse Robin
    Hood took
    from the poor, gave to
    the rich, paid for by the middle class. We cannot
    stand four more years
    of Reaganomics in any version, in any disguise.


    How do I document that case? Seven
    years later, the richest
    1 percent of our society pays 20
    percent less in taxes. The poorest 10 percent pay 20 percent more: Reaganomics.

    Reagan gave the rich and the powerful a multibilliondollar
    party. Now the party is over. He
    expects the people to pay for the damage. I take this principal position, convention, let us not
    raise taxes on
    the poor and the middleclass,
    but
    those who had
    the party, the rich and the
    powerful, must pay for the party.


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    I just want to
    take common sense to
    high places. We're spending one hundred and fifty billion
    dollars a year defending Europe and Japan
    43
    years after the war is over. We have more
    troops in
    Europe tonight
    than we had seven years ago. Yet
    the threat of war is ever more
    remote.


    Germany and Japan are now
    creditor nations. that means they've got a surplus. We are a
    debtor nation
    means
    we are in debt. Let them share more of the burden of their own
    defense. Use some of that money to build decent
    housing. Use some of that money to educate
    our children. Use some of that
    money for longterm
    health care. Use some of that money to
    wipe out
    these slums and put America back to work!


    I just want to
    take common sense to
    high places. If we can bail out
    Europe and Japan. if we
    can bail out Continental Bank and Chrysler and
    Mr. Iacocca, make [sic] 8,000 dollars an
    hour we
    can bail out the family farmer.

    I just want to
    make common
    sense. It does not
    make sense to close down six hundred and
    fifty thousand family farms in this country while
    importing food from abroad subsidized by the

    U.S. Government. Let's make sense.
    It does not
    make sense to be escorting all our tankers up and down the Persian Gulf paying
    $2.50 for every one dollar worth of oil we bring out, while oil wells are capped
    in Texas,
    Oklahoma, and Louisiana. I just want
    to make sense.

    Leadership must meet
    the moral challenge of its day.
    What's the moral
    challenge of our day?
    We have public accommodations. We have the right to
    vote.
    We have open
    housing.
    What's
    the fundamental challenge of our day? It
    is to end economic violence. Plant closings without
    notice economic
    violence. Even
    the greedy do not profit
    long from greed economic
    violence.

    Most poor people are not
    lazy.
    They are not black. They are not brown. They are mostly White
    and female and young. But whether White,
    Black or Brown, a
    hungry baby's belly turned
    inside out
    is the same color color
    it pain. color it hurt. color it agony.

    Most poor people are not on welfare. Some of them are illiterate and can't read the wantad
    sections. And when
    they can, they can't find a job that
    matches the address. They work hard
    everyday.

    I know. I live amongst them. I'm one of them. I know
    they work. I'm a witness. They catch
    the early bus. They work every day.


    They raise other people's children. They work everyday.


    They clean the streets. They work everyday.
    They drive dangerous cabs. They work everyday.
    They change the beds you slept in in these hotels last
    night and can't get a union contract.
    They work everyday.


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    No, no, they are not
    lazy!
    Someone must defend them because it's right, and they cannot
    speak for themselves. They work in hospitals. I
    know
    they do. They wipe the bodies of those
    who are sick with
    fever and pain. They empty their bedpans. They clean out their commodes.
    No job is beneath
    them, and yet when they get
    sick they cannot
    lie in the bed they made up
    every day.
    America, that is not
    right. We are a better Nation than
    that. We are a better Nation
    than
    that.

    We need a real war on drugs. You can't "just say no."
    It's deeper than
    that. You can't just get
    a palm reader or an astrologer. It's more profound than
    that.

    We are spending a hundred and fifty billion dollars on drugs a year.
    We've gone from ignoring
    it to
    focusing on the children. Children cannot buy a hundred and fifty billion dollars worth of
    drugs a year. a few highprofile
    athletes athletes
    are not
    laundering a hundred and fifty
    billion dollars a year bankers
    are.

    I met
    the children in Watts, who,
    unfortunately, in their despair, their grapes of hope have
    become raisins of despair, and they're turning on each other and they're selfdestructing.
    But
    I stayed with them all
    night
    long.
    I wanted to hear their case.

    They said, "Jesse Jackson, as you
    challenge us to say no to drugs, you're right. and to
    not sell
    them, you're right. and not
    use these guns, you're right." (And by the way, the promise of
    CETA [Comprehensive Employment and Training Act]. they displaced CETA
    they
    did not
    replace CETA.)


    "We have neither jobs nor houses nor services nor training no
    way out. Some of us take
    drugs as anesthesia for our pain. Some take drugs as a way of pleasure, good shortterm
    pleasure and longterm
    pain. Some sell drugs to make money. It's wrong, we know, but
    you
    need to know
    that we know. We can go and buy the drugs by the boxes at
    the port. If we can
    buy
    the drugs at the port, don't you believe the
    Federal government can
    stop it if they want
    to?"

    They say, "We don't
    have Saturday night specials anymore." They say, "We buy AK47's and
    Uzi's,
    the latest make of weapons. We buy them across the along these boulevards."

    You cannot
    fight a war on drugs unless and until you're going to challenge the bankers and
    the gun
    sellers and those who grow them. Don't just focus on the children. let's stop drugs at
    the level of supply and demand.
    We must end the scourge on the American Culture.

    Leadership.
    What difference will we make? Leadership. Cannot just
    go along to get along.
    We
    must do
    more than change Presidents. We must change direction.

    Leadership must face the moral challenge of our day. The nuclear war buildup
    is irrational.
    Strong leadership cannot desire to look tough and let
    that stand in the way of the pursuit of
    peace. Leadership must reverse the arms race.
    At
    least we should pledge no
    first use. Why?
    Because first use begets first retaliation. And that's mutual annihilation. That's not a rational
    way out.


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    No use at all. Let's think it out and not fight
    it our because it's an unwinnable fight. Why hold
    a card that
    you
    can never drop? Let's give peace a chance.

    Leadership.
    We now
    have this marvelous opportunity to have a breakthrough with
    the
    Soviets. Last
    year 200,000 Americans visited the Soviet Union. There's a chance for joint
    ventures into
    space not
    Star Wars and war arms escalation but a space defense initiative.
    Let's build in the space together and demilitarize the heavens. There's a way out.

    America,
    let
    us expand.
    When Mr. Reagan and Mr. Gorbachev met
    there was a big meeting.
    They represented together oneeighth
    of the human
    race.
    Seveneighths
    of the human
    race
    was locked out of that room. Most people in the world tonight half
    are Asian, onehalf
    of
    them are Chinese. There are 22 nations in
    the Middle East. There's Europe. 40 million Latin
    Americans next door to
    us. the Caribbean. Africa a
    halfbillion
    people.


    Most people in
    the world today are Yellow or Brown or Black, nonChristian,
    poor, female,
    young and don't speak English in the real world.


    This generation
    must offer leadership to the real world.
    We're losing ground in Latin America,
    Middle East, South Africa because we're not focusing on the real world.
    That's the real world.
    We must use basic principles support
    international law. We stand the most to gain from it.
    Support
    human rights we
    believe in
    that. Support selfdetermination
    we're
    built on that.
    Support economic development
    you
    know
    it's
    right. Be consistent and gain our moral
    authority in the world. I
    challenge you tonight, my friends, let's be bigger and better as a
    Nation and as a Party.

    We have basic challenges freedom
    in South
    Africa. We've already agreed as Democrats to
    declare South
    Africa to be a terrorist state. But
    don't just stop there. Get
    South Africa out of
    Angola. free Namibia. support
    the front line states. We must
    have a new
    humane human
    rights consistent policy in Africa.


    I'm often asked, "Jesse, why do
    you
    take on these tough issues? They're not very political. We
    can't win
    that way."


    If an
    issue is morally right, it will eventually be
    political. It
    may be political and never be right.
    Fannie Lou
    Hamer didn't
    have the most votes in Atlantic City, but her principles have
    outlasted every delegate who voted to
    lock her out. Rosa Parks did not
    have the most votes,
    but she was morally right. Dr. King didn't
    have the most votes about
    the Vietnam War, but
    he
    was morally right. If we are principled first, our politics will fall in place.


    "Jesse, why do
    you take these big bold initiatives?" A poem by an
    unknown author went
    something like this: "We mastered the air, we conquered the sea, annihilated distance and
    prolonged life, but we're not wise enough
    to
    live on this earth without war and without
    hate."


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    As
    for Jesse Jackson: "I'm tired of sailing my little boat, far inside the harbor bar. I want to
    go
    out where the big ships float, out on
    the deep where the great ones are.
    And should my frail
    craft prove too slight for waves that sweep those billows o'er, I'd rather go down
    in the
    stirring fight
    than drowse to death at
    the sheltered shore."


    We've got
    to go out, my friends, where the big boats are.

    And then for our children. Young America,
    hold your head
    high now. We can win. We must not
    lose you
    to drugs and violence, premature pregnancy, suicide, cynicism, pessimism and
    despair. We can win. Wherever you are tonight, I challenge you
    to
    hope and to dream. Don't
    submerge your dreams. Exercise above all else,
    even on drugs, dream of the day you are drug
    free. Even
    in the gutter, dream of the day that
    you will be up on your feet again.

    You
    must
    never stop dreaming. Face reality, yes, but don't stop with
    the way things are.
    Dream of things as they ought
    to be. Dream. Face pain, but love, hope, faith and dreams will
    help you rise above the pain. Use hope and imagination as weapons of survival and progress,
    but you keep on dreaming, young America. Dream of peace. Peace is rational and reasonable.
    War is irrationable [sic] in
    this age, and unwinnable.


    Dream of teachers who teach for life and not for a living. Dream of doctors who are concerned
    more about public health than private wealth. Dream of lawyers more concerned about justice
    than a judgeship. Dream of preachers who are concerned more about prophecy than
    profiteering. Dream on the high
    road with sound values.

    And then America, as we go forth
    to
    September, October, November and then beyond,
    America must
    never surrender to a high
    moral
    challenge.


    Do not
    surrender to drugs.
    The best drug policy is a "no
    first use." Don't surrender with
    needles and cynicism. Let's have "no
    first use" on
    the one hand, or clinics on the other. Never
    surrender, young America.
    Go forward.


    America must
    never surrender to malnutrition. We can feed the hungry and clothe the naked.
    We must never surrender.
    We must go
    forward.

    We must never surrender to
    illiteracy. Invest
    in
    our children. Never surrender. and go
    forward. We must
    never surrender to inequality. Women cannot compromise ERA or
    comparable worth. Women are making 60 cents on
    the dollar to what a man
    makes. Women
    cannot buy meat cheaper. Women cannot buy bread cheaper. Women cannot buy milk
    cheaper. Women deserve to get paid for the work that you do. It's right!
    And it's fair.

    Don't surrender, my friends. Those who have AIDS tonight, you deserve our compassion.
    Even with
    AIDS you
    must
    not surrender.


    Transcription by
    Michael
    E. Eidenmuller. Copyright Status: Restricted, seek permission.
    Page
    10



    AmericanRhetoric.com


    In
    your wheelchairs. I
    see you
    sitting here tonight in those wheelchairs. I've stayed with you.
    I've reached out
    to you across our Nation. And don't you give up. I
    know
    it's tough
    sometimes. People look down on you. It
    took you a little more effort to get
    here tonight. And
    no one should look down on you, but
    sometimes mean people do. The only justification we
    have for looking down on someone is that we're going to stop and pick them up.


    But even in your wheelchairs, don't you give up. We cannot forget
    50 years ago when our
    backs were against the wall, Roosevelt was in a wheelchair. I would rather have Roosevelt
    in a
    wheelchair than Reagan and Bush on a horse. Don't you surrender and don't you give up.
    Don't surrender and don't give up!


    Why I cannot challenge you this way? "Jesse Jackson, you don't understand my situation. You
    be on
    television. You don't understand. I see you with
    the big people. You don't
    understand
    my situation."


    I understand.
    You
    see me on TV, but you don't
    know
    the me that makes me,
    me. They
    wonder, "Why does Jesse run?" because they see me running for the White
    House. They don't
    see the house I'm running from.


    I have a story. I wasn't always on television. Writers were not always outside my door. When
    I was born
    late one afternoon, October 8th, in Greenville, South Carolina,
    no writers asked my
    mother her name. Nobody chose to write down
    our address. My mama was not supposed to
    make it, and I was not
    supposed to make it. You see,
    I was born of a teenage
    mother, who
    was born of a teenage
    mother.

    I understand.
    I know abandonment, and people being mean
    to you, and saying you're nothing
    and nobody and can
    never be anything.


    I understand. Jesse Jackson
    is my third name. I'm adopted. When
    I
    had
    no name, my
    grandmother gave me her name. My name was
    Jesse Burns 'til I was 12. So I wouldn't
    have a
    blank space, she gave me a name to
    hold me over. I understand when nobody knows your
    name.
    I
    understand when you have no
    name.


    I understand.
    I wasn't born in the hospital. Mama didn't have insurance. I was born in the bed
    at [the] house. I
    really do understand.
    Born
    in a threeroom
    house, bathroom in the backyard,
    slop jar by the bed,
    no
    hot and cold running water. I understand.
    Wallpaper used for
    decoration? No. For a windbreaker. I
    understand. I'm a working person's person. That's why I
    understand you whether you're Black or White.
    I understand work. I was not
    born with a
    silver spoon
    in my mouth. I
    had a shovel programmed for my hand.


    My mother, a working woman. So
    many of the days she went
    to work early, with runs in her
    stockings. She knew better, but she wore runs in her stockings so that
    my brother and I could
    have matching socks and not be laughed at at school. I
    understand.


    Transcription by
    Michael
    E. Eidenmuller. Copyright Status: Restricted, seek permission.
    Page
    11



    AmericanRhetoric.com


    At
    3 o'clock on Thanksgiving Day, we couldn't eat turkey because momma was preparing
    somebody else's turkey at
    3 o'clock. We had to
    play football
    to entertain ourselves. And then
    around 6 o'clock she would get off the Alta Vista bus and we would bring up the leftovers and
    eat our turkey leftovers,
    the carcass, the cranberries around
    8 o'clock at
    night. I really do
    understand.

    Every one of these funny labels they put on you, those of you who are watching this broadcast
    tonight
    in the projects, on the corners, I understand. Call
    you outcast, low down, you can't
    make it, you're nothing, you're from nobody, subclass, underclass. when you see Jesse
    Jackson, when
    my name goes in nomination, your name goes in
    nomination.

    I was born
    in the slum, but
    the slum was not born
    in me. And it wasn't born
    in you, and you
    can make it.

    Wherever you are tonight, you can
    make it. Hold your head high. stick your chest out. You
    can make it. It gets dark sometimes, but
    the morning comes. Don't you
    surrender!


    Suffering breeds character, character breeds faith. In
    the end faith will not disappoint.

    You
    must
    not surrender!
    You
    may or may not get
    there but just
    know
    that
    you're qualified!
    And you hold on, and hold out!
    We must
    never surrender!! America will
    get better and better.

    Keep
    hope alive. Keep hope alive! Keep hope alive!
    On tomorrow night and beyond, keep
    hope alive!


    I love you very much. I love you very much.


    Transcription by
    Michael
    E. Eidenmuller. Copyright Status: Restricted, seek permission.
    Page
    12


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