Usually,
          I am reluctant to lend advice to those whom I frequently disagree
          with. With the Holidays upon us, I cannot seem to stop myself from
          staying in the giving mood. With that, I wish to offer a special gift
          to the Reverend Jesse Jackson this season.
          
          You see, if I were from another planet (Al Gore, I've come to take you
          home) and were to examine only the actions of Jesse Jackson as of
          late, I would believe that racism is nonexistent in this country. This
          obviously is not true, however it seems that Rev. Jackson has to
          resort to manufacturing racial problems for him to get any airtime
          these days. From his ridiculous claims in the Decatur, IL school
          expulsions to his recent calls for "civil rights explosions"
          in Florida, it appears that Jesse has run out of ways to help his
          fellow African Americans. My gift to him is a few suggestions on ways
          he can actually help the plight of black Americans...
          
          First of all, stop the claims of under-representation of blacks on
          television and actually address the way blacks are being
          represented. One only need to look at daytime television to see the
          negative stereotypes of black people on full display on Jerry, Ricki,
          Maury, etc. Day in and day out, we are bludgeoned with black men with
          5 different "ho's," black women who refuse to get off
          welfare so they can keep dealing drugs, urban thugs who cannot master
          the English language and a whole mess of people who cannot disagree
          without resorting to mob mentality. These were the stereotypes that
          black leaders fought so hard to dispel in years past. As a
          libertarian, I am opposed to strong-arming the networks into dumping
          these programs, however your dissenting voice may give them pause
          before they continue to tailor their shows in this fashion.
          
          Second, maybe you should consider offering hope, rather than stirring
          the emotional angst of your followers. While it is impossible for me
          to imagine what it would be like to grow up as a black man, I can
          imagine what it would be like to grow up in a housing project,
          attending failing schools and being told time and time again that the
          system is against me. My outlook on life would be pretty bleak. Where
          are the black success stories? Why, when given the opportunity, do you
          feel it necessary to portray the message that the country is against
          black people? Wouldn't it be preferable to bring the black business
          owners or black authors out in front of black children and show them
          what can be accomplished with hard work and a strong spirit?
          
          Third, grab hold of the school voucher agenda and don't let go. I have
          struggled to understand your opposition to this. If you are truly
          concerned about the future of black children you would be leading the
          way on this issue. The majority of black Americans support a school
          voucher program. Why? Because public education has failed them and
          they need a viable alternative. We have tried throwing more money at
          the government controlled education system and have ended up with
          lower scores in both language and math and a lot more bureaucracy. If
          a school voucher program could help just a handful of kids, it should
          be worth your consideration if not your full support.
          
          Additionally, you should think about your causes. Things like more
          black coaches and owners in professional sports sound nice on the
          surface, but really isn't a good use of your time. I cannot understand
          how having a multimillionaire former athlete becoming a head coach is
          a big step forward. There are millions of inner city people looking
          for real employment; meanwhile, you're working to get Isiah Thomas out
          of the Jacuzzi and into the owner's suite. This is not social
          progress, it's favoritism.
          
          Finally, maybe you should consider going back to being 'apolitical'
          Jesse. While your Marxist philosophies on social justice will not
          allow you to separate from the Democratic party ideologically, you can
          separate from them politically. I can go on for pages explaining to
          you how collectivism does nothing for African Americans, but time and
          space requirements prevent me from doing so. So let me just say that
          aligning yourself with one party means you only have achieved only
          half of your potential. Imagine the weight of your words if you could
          not be so easily labeled a Democratic henchman.  Your arrangement
          of 'I'll give you votes if you give me a soapbox' with the Democratic
          party has rendered you powerless with George Bush winning the White
          House. A thirst for power can be blinding, but is it so blinding that
          you should call for a riot if you don't get your way? Would a riot
          similar to the Rodney King riots be good for this country? Would it
          ease racial tensions? Is it really worth it?
          
          What it comes down to is that your once promising career of civil
          rights leadership has become a political joke. You have become a bad
          impersonation of your former self and are nothing more than a
          political pawn for the party you so blindly support. You are Saturday
          Night Live fodder. You are the butt of several insider political
          jokes. How are you going to advance civil rights in this country when
          hardly anyone takes you seriously?
          
          Many of my readers may now be wondering why I took the effort to point
          these things out, as Jesse has become the burr in the saddle of race
          relations in this country. Why not let him fade into the sunset? Why
          not let him become the next spokesperson for Ronco's newest
          infomercial for the Popeil Deluxe Rotisserie? ( It facilitates, it
          irradiates, it can make a cake, it rotissirates; and you can have it
          for 6 easy payments of $39.99).
          
          The truth is, Jesse Jackson has done some good, if not great, things
          in the name of racial equality. If he continues down the path he is on
          now he will become irrelevant (if he is not there already). Normally,
          I would be happy to see a roadblock to racial harmony removed in this
          country, but without Jesse in the picture the next voice for black
          America would be Al Sharpton.
          
          Now that's scary.
          
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