Is Jesse Ruining Barack's Chances With Black Folks

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WASHINGTON (CNN) — The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a high-profile backer of Sen. Barack Obama's White House bid, says all the Democratic presidential candidates are ignoring African-American issues except former Sen. John Edwards.

"The Democratic candidates — with the exception of John Edwards, who opened his campaign in New Orleans' Ninth Ward and has made addressing poverty central to his campaign — have virtually ignored the plight of African Americans in this country," Jackson writes in a Chicago Sun-Times Op-ed appearing in Tuesday's edition.

"The catastrophic crisis that engulfs the African-American community goes without mention," Jackson continued. "No urban agenda is given priority. When thousands of African Americans marched in protest in Jena, Louisiana, not one candidate showed up."

Jackson, who endorsed Obama's candidacy earlier this year, previously caused a headache for the campaign when he reportedly told a South Carolina audience in September that the Illinois Democrat is "acting like he's white."

Criticizing the Democratic candidates' response to the case in Jena, Louisiana, Jackson also said then Obama needed to be "bolder" in his stances if he hoped to do well in South Carolina — a state in which African Americans constitute more than 50 percent of Democratic primary voters.

Following those comments, Jackson later issued a statement reaffirming his support for Obama and commending him for "speaking out and demanding fairness on his defining issue."

But in Monday's Op-ed, Jackson writes, "it is no longer acceptable for candidates to turn a blind eye and a deaf ear to entrenched discrimination and still expect to reap our votes."

In response to Jackson's comments, the Obama campaign notes the Illinois senator unveiled a $6 billion package of programs in July that aims to combat urban poverty.

The plan includes the creation of affordable housing and jobs, providing education and financial support for parents, and creating an institution modeled after the World Bank specifically for America's cities.

Obama campaign spokesperson Candice Tolliver told CNN, “We encourage Rev Jackson to closely examine the Senator’s platform and take another look”
 
Jesse has endorsed Obama, and continues to support him. I think its good that Jesse is agitating Democrats.. sooner or later they are going to have to face the music and address issue of importance to African Americans. They can't run from it.. its a very large voting block...
 
JESSIE HAS ALWAYS BEEN AN IRRITATING MUTHAFUKA TO ME.
I REMEMVER WHEN PUSH FIRST STARTED
I DIDNT LIKE HIM THEN
IM GLAD HE HAS DONE A LOT FOR OUR PEOPLE
I JUST NEVER LIKED HIM.....EVEN LESS NOW
AND WITH THIS NEWS EVEN LESS.

I THINK HE IS A FRAUD AND ALWAYS HAS BEEN.:hmm:
 
Does anyone have TRUFICTION's email address.. I think someone hacked his account...
:lol:


JESSIE HAS ALWAYS BEEN AN IRRITATING MUTHAFUKA TO ME.
I REMEMVER WHEN PUSH FIRST STARTED
I DIDNT LIKE HIM THEN
IM GLAD HE HAS DONE A LOT FOR OUR PEOPLE
I JUST NEVER LIKED HIM.....EVEN LESS NOW
AND WITH THIS NEWS EVEN LESS.

I THINK HE IS A FRAUD AND ALWAYS HAS BEEN.:hmm:
 
jesse is playing into the whiteman plan... he needs to fall back... he had his chance and he did nothing but marionalize black folk...

he is to caught up in riding mlk's coat tails straight to the bank that he done lost sight of how to advance black folk.

simpleton
 
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JesseJacksonRaceCard.jpg
 
for you Colin Powel muthafuggas, here are the quotes from the article, made by Jesse... which ones do you have a problem with and WHY (please explain):

"The Democratic candidates — with the exception of John Edwards, who opened his campaign in New Orleans' Ninth Ward and has made addressing poverty central to his campaign — have virtually ignored the plight of African Americans in this country,"

"The catastrophic crisis that engulfs the African-American community goes without mention," Jackson continued. "No urban agenda is given priority. When thousands of African Americans marched in protest in Jena, Louisiana, not one candidate showed up."

Jackson also said then Obama needed to be "bolder" in his stances if he hoped to do well in South Carolina — a state in which African Americans constitute more than 50 percent of Democratic primary voters.


it is no longer acceptable for candidates to turn a blind eye and a deaf ear to entrenched discrimination and still expect to reap our votes."
 
for you Colin Powel muthafuggas, here are the quotes from the article, made by Jesse... which ones do you have a problem with and WHY (please explain):

His motives concern me. I'm convinced that he's campaigning for Clinton in a clever way. Sad enough, he is one of the only national figures that puts any effort into holding candidates to the real issues affecting black folks.
 
WASHINGTON (CNN) — The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a high-profile backer of Sen. Barack Obama's White House bid, says all the Democratic presidential candidates are ignoring African-American issues except former Sen. John Edwards.

Here's what I don't understand...

If he believes this is true... Why the hell is he backing Obama over Edwards?
 
Jesse is not the average constituent, with one phone call he could express his concerns to the candidate he is supposed to be endorsing.Making statements likes these on the eve of arguably the most important primaries is suspect.

I am with mainman; jesse is undercover brotha.
 
ASSIST:

Most Democratic candidates are ignoring African Americans
JESSE JACKSON jjackson@rainbowpush.org
November 27, 2007

Can Democrats get the votes they need simply because they're not Republicans? You might think so in this presidential campaign. African-American and urban votes are critical to any Democratic victory. Bill Clinton won two terms without winning the most white votes. His margin was the overwhelming support of black voters. George Bush learned that lesson; that's why his campaigns spent so much effort suppressing the black vote in key states like Florida in 2000 and Ohio in 2004. His victory margin was the tally of votes suppressed or uncounted.

Yet the Democratic candidates -- with the exception of John Edwards, who opened his campaign in New Orleans' Ninth Ward and has made addressing poverty central to his campaign -- have virtually ignored the plight of African Americans in this country. The catastrophic crisis that engulfs the African-American community goes without mention. No urban agenda is given priority. When thousands of African Americans marched in protest in Jena, La., not one candidate showed up.

Democratic candidates are talking about health care and raising the minimum wage, but they aren't talking about the separate and stark realities facing African Americans.

The civil rights movement succeeded in ending segregation and providing blacks with the right to vote. But the end of legal apartheid did not end the era of discrimination. And the ending of institutionalized violence did not end institutionalized racism.

Patterns of discrimination are sharply etched. African Americans have, on average, about half of the good things that whites have, and double the bad things. We have about half the average household income and less than half the household wealth. On the other hand, we're suffering twice the level of unemployment and twice the level of infant mortality (widely accepted as a measure of general health).

African Americans are brutalized by a system of criminal injustice. Young African Americans are more likely to be stopped, more likely to be searched if stopped, more likely to be arrested if searched, more likely to be charged if arrested, more likely to be sentenced to prison if charged, less likely to get early parole if imprisoned. Every study confirms that the discrimination is systemic and ruinous. And yet no candidate speaks to this central reality.

African Americans are more likely to go to overcrowded and underfunded schools, more likely to go without health care, more likely to drop out, less likely to find employment. Those who do work have less access to banks and are more likely to be ripped off by payday lenders, more likely to be stuck with high-interest auto and business loans, and far more likely to be steered to risky mortgages -- even when adjusting for income. And yet, no candidate speaks to this central reality.

The result is visiting a catastrophe on the urban black community. I and many others campaign for young people to stay in school, to graduate and not to make babies until they are prepared to be parents. My son and I write and teach about personal financial responsibility. Personal responsibility is critical. But personal responsibility alone cannot overcome the effects of a discriminatory criminal justice and economic system in generating broken families and broken dreams.

The Rev. Martin Luther King saw the movement to end segregation and gain voting rights as the first stage of the civil rights movement. The second stage -- to gain economic justice and equal opportunity in fact -- he knew would be more difficult. Now, 40 years later, it is no longer acceptable for candidates to turn a blind eye and a deaf ear to entrenched discrimination and still expect to reap our votes.
 
JESSIE HAS ALWAYS BEEN AN IRRITATING MUTHAFUKA TO ME.
I REMEMVER WHEN PUSH FIRST STARTED
I DIDNT LIKE HIM THEN
IM GLAD HE HAS DONE A LOT FOR OUR PEOPLE
I JUST NEVER LIKED HIM.....EVEN LESS NOW
AND WITH THIS NEWS EVEN LESS.

I THINK HE IS A FRAUD AND ALWAYS HAS BEEN.:hmm:

fraud? soooooooo.....dudes risk being murdered during the civil rights era, go through the 70s and 80s speakin up on issues that affect black folks in america, then ups his game to international causes in the 90s and 2000s just to fake tha funK? u need a history lesson....
 
Does anyone have TRUFICTION's email address.. I think someone hacked his account...
:lol:

I KNOW ITS OFF BASE FOR ME
BUT THATS SOME PERSONAL SHIT I GUESS.
I TAKE NOTHING FROM HIS WORK....I CANT...BUT
JUST BECAUSE A CAT DOES GOOD WORK MOST OF THE TIME
DOESNT MEAN I HAVE TO LIKE HIM.:dance:

fraud? soooooooo.....dudes risk being murdered during the civil rights era, go through the 70s and 80s speakin up on issues that affect black folks in america, then ups his game to international causes in the 90s and 2000s just to fake tha funK? u need a history lesson....

I DONT NEED SHIT I WAS ALIVE AND WELL AND A CHICAGO RESIDENT WHILE HE WAS GAINING HIS POPULARITY SO MISS ME WITH THAT NONSENSE

I SAID I DONT LIKE HIM
I AM ENTITLED TO LIKE WHO I WAN TOO.
 
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