Well Reverend Jackson thank you so much for the opportunity to talk to you now he said I want to begin by looking at your historic run for office when you laid claim to the Democratic nomination and how did that pave the way for Barack Obama presidency would be that presumptuous but suffice it to say in some point someone starts and run just to run and if I had not run in my cabinet with set people up right to disappoint them I ran and they'd afore I learned what this is so over again I learned the campaign and I was a New Hampshire not just in the southern states we were told you shouldn't I was to white all of the good of the find you can't be valid if you don't take it all on somebody's going to found the family farmers and who lost a farm to the corporate farm and the blackness of the record lost a job to corporations going abroad and more income and then they realized it was an economic class issue class issue and so we begin to look up the family farm and the unemployed urban worker and a coalition was born so we got double digits and with that was a big deal we actually beat gooing get bought and I won that was a big deal I mean the whites could he have voice of the limits of race that's significant You mention that because you know run just run away to use overhead lines and people to this day refer to that era as one of the watershed moments in American politics in Democratic politics did you feel that you were on the try shoulder for a major change and when you look back do you feel it was a great move for you to have made that kind of a bold run and to really democratize process I mean the how big the moment was in the moment because I was really running as an organizer in the political season the primers the candidates determine the agenda and the dress we're going to get our civil rights issues raised we talk about urban policy and free Mandela and John the quote who couldn't hurt by running and running to the press. And so by the 8 there was an appreciation of I brought to the conversation I remember one night we were told just you know the moral right we're going to be in all these debates were going discuss foreign policy so if you don't want to come you'll have to go somewhere you go from France and I'll just you want to understand I said as I'm anxious to depart from policy to come a sickness of what you know about foreign policy so we can go on the phone policy slavery was a foreign policy. Of the mother we were trying to expand consciousness looking back. What how crucial was it for students to leave activism back in the fifty's and sixty's students basically came suddenly had the drive I mean legal apartheid the legal segregation we paid the bloody price in that little part that because there were those so it sort of destiny in keeping us apart and I found that the people of Beslan came as quite close to exploit our part in this so one generation fought in segregation as a matter of law motivation for for the right to vote so now fighting to reduce student loan debt student loan debt ridden credit. It cost too much to go to school means to the best minds can't even apply to attend University of Missouri became almost a poster child around the country for diversity. How important is it what do you think is a little restaurant on the football field right now and the classroom. Not in the faculty not until your professors and the football team said they will not play football on this it will address it was in the form of the economic engine and P.R. man they call football that's captured the nation's attention and those young men made a statement to the nation Bernie Sanders made it clear on the campaign trail to let us know Senator Bernie Sanders that he supported you Ron in the eighty's for president and he built lively his populism on your campaign of the $84.88 in charge in the start of school and so forth he brought a lot of people around this movement a sign this movement around Democratic politics what happens to that movement now moving forward as a demonic con to political accountability those who were in that movement must belong this is rollers if they let their inspiration evaporate a trend and the people know it was just a phase. They must not allow themselves about the vote for you personally to fulfill the mission I would think that not the team would find a certain joy in this moment he would urge us in the classroom watching this people is taping going to class people to not help the poor I mean they get a room. No you know even your silo. And then the furniture on their hands of your own religious group or you as they part in this would join the universe universe a toss universe a community if you can of the universe miss you and. can cope with a challenging world if you just learn how to survive in your silo you live beneath your privilege so learn to live share and grow together Thank you Reverend. Wright The Reverend Jesse Jackson founder and president of the Rainbow Push Coalition America's premier civil rights leader and bankroll a Thompson.