From Hagan.Heller@Eng.Sun.COM Wed Aug 12 21:07:51 1992 Return-Path: Date: Wed, 12 Aug 92 12:35:04 PDT From: Hagan.Heller@Eng.Sun.COM (Hagan Heller) To: bzs@world.std.com Subject: Jackson Text of Jackson's Speech Here is the prepared text of the speech Tuesday by Rev Jesse Jackson to the Democratic Natl Convention: Chairman Ron Brown, you've done a difficult job well. You have brought down barriers. Your work makes us proud. We must not take the genius of Ron Brown for granted. Give Ron Brown a great round of applause. President Bill Clinton, you have survived a tough spring. It will make you stronger for the fall. With your stripes you must heal and make us better. The hopes of many depend upon your quest. Be comforted that you do not stand alone. And now that it looks like you are going to win the race in November, people are already lining up outside your hotel to get a job on appointment. Just remember when you get to the White House that I put Hope, Ark, on the map by saying keep Hope, Ark, alive, all over America. Vice President Al Gore, in years past Republicans would always talk about a stature gap. This time around they have a vice president who cannot spell potato, and our chlorofluoro-carbo-antidisestablishmenatarianism at the same time, Al Gore. We want to thank Al Gore for his work as environmental leader, supporter of social justice, and original sponsor of DC statehood. We stand as witnesses to a pregnant moment in history. Across the globe we feel the pain that comes with new birth. Here in our country pain abounds. We must be certain that it leads to new birth, and not a tragic miscarriage of opportunity. We must turn pain to power, pain to partnership, and not pain to polarization. The great temptation in these difficult days, racial polarization and economic injustice, is to make political arguments black and white, and miss the moral imperative of wrong and right. Vanity asks: is it popular? Politics asks: will it win? Morality and conscience ask: is it right? We are part of a continuing struggle for justice and decency, links in a chain that began long before we were born, and will extend long after we are gone. And history will remember us not for our positioning, but for our principles. Now by a move to the political center, left or right, but rather by our grasp on the moral and ethical center of wrong and right. We who stand with working people and poor have a special burden. We must stand for what is right, stand up to those who have the might, reduce those grounded in the faith that that which is morally wrong will never be politically right; but if it is morally sound it will eventually be politically right. As I'm standing here tonight and look into your faces, I hear the pain and see the struggles that prepared the ground that you stand on. We've come a long ways from where we started a generation ago it seemed, in 1964. Fanny Lou Hamer from Sunflower County, Miss, had to fight even to sit in this convention. Tonight, 28 years later, chairing the party is Ron Brown from Harlem, managers Alexis Herman, an African American woman from Mobile, Ala, We've come a long way. And yet we're more interdependent that we realize. Not only African Americans benefited from the movement led by Dr King for justice. It was only when African Americans in the South are free to win those seats that Bill Clinton and Al Gore from that same South takes this rostrum to lead our country into the next century. Tonight, we face another challenge. Ten million Americans unemployed, 25 million on food stamps, 35 million in poverty, 40 million have no health care. And the coal miners in Big Stone Gap, West Va, to the loggers and environmentalists in Roseberg, Ore, from this place textile workers in my home town of Greenville, SC, the plants closing in Van Nuys, Cal, pain abounds. Plants are closing, jobs leaving on the fast track, more working for less, trapped by repressive anti-labor laws, the homeless are a source of national shame and disgrace. There is a harshness to America that comes from not seeing and a growing mindless materialism. Our television sets bring the world into our living rooms. But too often we overlook our neighbors. It was there in Hamlet, NC, 25 workers died in a fire at Imperial Foods, more women than men, more white than black. They worked making chicken parts in vats heated to 400 degrees with few windows and no fans. The owners locked the doors from the outside. The women died. He said he locked the doors because they may steal some chicken wings. These women died trapped by economic desperation and oppressive work laws. One woman came up to me after the fire and said Rev Jackson, I want to work, I don't want to be on welfare, I have 3 children and no husband. She said, "I plucks 90 wings a minute. Sometimes I can't bend my wrists, I catches this carpal thing", talking about the carpal syndrome. Then when we get hurt and can't bend our wrists, then we can't get no medical care, then ungrammatical profundities shows, and then they fines us, because we're crippled. And then they called us lazy bitch. And she began to cry, and I said you are not lazy, and you are not bitch, and you are not alone, and a change is coming. We stand with you. Her friend, a white woman, came up to me and said, let me have your other shoulder. I'm 7 months pregnant. We're standing in 2 inches of water, with 2 5-minute bathroom breaks a day. Sometimes we can't hold our water. And then our bowels break, and then we faint. We wept together. If we keep Hamlet, NC, in our hearts and before our eyes, we will act to empower working people. We will protect the right to organize and to strike. We will empower workers to enforce health and safety laws. We will provide a national health care system, a minimum wage sufficient to bring workers out of poverty, and paid parental leave. We must build a movement for economic justice across this nation. This land is our land. Tonight, we face a difficult challenge. Our cities have been abandoned, farmers forsaken, children neglected. Floods in Chicago, fires in Los Angeles. They say they cannot find $35 billion for our mayors. but the latest downpayment for S&L bailout thieves was $25 billion. If we can find the money to bail out S&L thieves, we can find the money to bail out American cities. It is time to rebuild America. When I made the quiet reasoned judgment to support this ticket, I did a sound analysis. Four years ago we fought for a program to reinvest in America, paid for by fair taxes on the rich, and savings on the military. This year Governor Bill Clinton has taken a substantial step in that direction. He has expressed Democratic support for DC statehood. More people live in Washington than 5 states. We pay more taxes than 10 states. We had more youth in the Persian Gulf than 20 states. We deserve the right to vote. He supports on-site same-day registration, and furthermore, willing to retrain workers that they might pay their fair share of taxes. We must build upon that tradition. The Rainbow Coalition has added another dimension. There are $3 trillion in private and public pension funds. We've drawn on Felix Rohatyn. We've used pension monies to help prop up South Africa and immoral use of the money. We've used it for leveraged buy-outs, to build buildings that are now vacant. We can use over 10 years secured $500 billion of the workers' money with workers' consent, add another $500 billion--a 10-year trillion dollar plan. Let's put America back to work. We can build a national railroad, where we lay the bed and make the steel and make the rail, and ride the cars, and build the cars. And let's put America back to work! Not welfare, but our share, and job share. Put America back to work! Our vision--our vision must correspond with the size of our problems. Today there is no Russian empire to fight. Use that money to rebuild our nation. There's hope in the world tonight. In Israel, Prime Minister Rabin's election is a step towards greater security and peace for the entire region. Rabin's wisdom in affirming negotiation over confrontation, and land for peace, and bargaining table over battle field has inspired hope, not only in democratic Israel, but on the West Bank as well. Israeli security and Palestinian self-determination are inextricably bound. There must be a new Middle East where Israelis and Palestinians can live together as brothers and sisters and not die apart in war after war after war after war. With stable partners like Mubarak and King Fahd in Saudi Arabia, and Boutros Ghali at the UN, peace is on the way in the Middle East. Let all the talk stop about driving Jews into the sea, or driving Arabs from the land. Let's stop war talk, and let's have peace talk. Let's have peace in that region. In Africa today, democracy's on the march. Under President Babangida [phonetic] successful elections were held just last week. But democracy cannot flourish amid economic ruins. Democracy protects the right to vote, but not the right to eat. Today President Deuf of Senegal, who heads the Organization of African Unity, is pushing for democracy. But just as there was a Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe and Japan, then apply it to Africa as well. Let's wipe out hunger and starvation all over the world. Make a world of peace and justice for everybody. As Democrats, it's not our mission just to fight for the political center, but the moral center. We cannot become isolationist. We must reach out. Let us not forget in 1939, 900 Jews left Germany, coming to America for freedom. They got within Miami Beach, Fla, eyesight. US authorities turned the 900 Jews, mostly women and children, around on the ship called the St Louis. They got back to Germany. Hitler killed them, and said to them, no one would accept you. It was anti-Semitic and wrong to lock them out. But guess what? 1942, you saw young Kristi Yamaguchi skating to glory in the Olympics a few months ago. Her mother was born in an American concentration camp. 120,000 Japanese-Americans locked up while they fought to help us win the 2d World War. If it was wrong and anti-Semitic to lock the Jews out in 1939, if it was wrong to lock the Japanese-Americans up in 1942, it's wrong to lock the Haitians out in 1992. Tonight, South Africa remains a terrorist state. Sanctions should be reimposed until there's an interim government established in South Africa. Lastly, there's a lot of talk these days about family values. Even as we spurn the homeless on the street, remember, Jesus was born to a homeless couple, outdoors in a stable, in the winter. Jesus was a child of a single mother. But when Mary said, Joseph was not the father, she was abused and questioned. If Mary had aborted the baby, she would have been called immoral. If she had the baby she would have been called unfit, without family values. But Mary had family values. It was Herod, the Quayle of his day, who put no value on the family. When Dan Quayle tries to ride both sides of this private religious moral issue, he is above his potato. Above all, Democrats, we must reach out to our children, our children are in trouble. They are embittered, they were not born that way. They live amidst violence and rejection. They live in broken streets, broken glass, broken sidewalks, broken families, broken hearts. Their music, their rap, their video, their art, reflects their broken world. And yet, these are our children. To many of them, I say to you, jail is a step up. We spend in Los Angeles, on those children, to go to a high school, where Congresswoman Maxine Waters and I stayed with them in Imperial Courts and Nickerson Gardens, those children cannot imagine a health insurance package. They cannot imagine applying to go to college. They cannot imagine a job. We spend on them to go to high school $5000 a year, but the downtown jail, $34,000 a year. For them jail is a step up. For once they are jailed, they will no longer be hit by drive-by shootings. Once they are jailed, they are no longer homeless. Once they are jailed, they have balanced meals. Once they are jailed, it's warm in the wintertime; it's cool in the summer time. Once they are jailed, they have adult supervision. We must reach out to our children. Better that we have clean hearts and dirty hands than to have dirty hearts and clean hands. These are our children. These are our children. These are our children. These are our children. And I say this to you tonight as we proceed toward November, in all this ugliness there is hope. There is still that silver lining in the clouds. Let us not forget, we talk a lot about Rodney King and how the white police beat him, how the white jury freed them, and how racist that was--and it was. But lest you forget, and lest a white man named George Halladay with a sense of conscience and instinct, had not George Halladay filmed the beating and made it public, tonight Rodney King would be in jail accused of assaulting police officers. He is a genuine point of light. But then on the other side of town, you saw the white truck driver beaten on television. It was wrong. It was wrong for the police to withdraw from their duty. But those police did not save Mr Denny. It was 4 young black youth operating as good Samaritans. They saved his life. There is hope. That is hope. As we move to the next dimension, I share this with you, Mr Chairman, to our next president and vice president, not very long ago, I was in South Carolina speaking to a small school. I saw a strange and unusual sight. I saw a 6'8" athlete walking across the campus, holding the hand of a 3' dwarf. There was this contrast. It looked to be romantic. She was looking up, and he was looking down. They got to where the sidewalks, and she jumped up on the bench and they embraced and kissed. And he gave her books. She went skipping down the sidewalk. I tried to act normal, but Andy, it looked funny to me. I said, Mr President, what am I looking at? He said, well, I thought you would ask. You see, it is his sister. As a matter of fact, it is his twin sister. And by some freak of genetics, he came out the giant, and she came out dwarfed. He's a top athlete in the state. We couldn't afford to get him. All the big schools offered him scholarships. The pros offered him a contract. But he said, I can only go to the college that my sister can get a scholarship. The NCAA said, but we can't give 2 scholarships. We have bright lights; we have pro possibilities. He said, but if my sister can't go, I can't go. Somewhere that boy learned something about ethics, about real caring, about real character. If my sister can't go, I can't go. All of us are not born giants with silver spoons in our mouths and gold slippers on our feet. Some of us are born short--short of hope, short of opportunity, abandoned, neglected, homeless, motherless, teeth crooked, eyes tangled, dreams busted, hurt. But somebody has to measure their giantness, not by leaping up, but by reaching back and reaching out and loving and caring and sharing. Democrats, if we pursue that ethic, that love ethic, that care ethic, we will win. And deserve to win. Stand tall. Never surrender. Keep hope alive. Keep hope alive. Keep hope alive. Keep hope alive.