Well Reverend Jackson thank you so much for the opportunity to talk to you now he's a how important or what role do you see that students can play in creating change social change one thing students have today it didn't happen 2 years ago was the right to vote we put the big prize for the right to vote after all the 2 of them for the 6 years average Americans could not vote and longer that a woman could vote the 23rd of the members and 1920 to 24. And so this is one that was not on the level that maybe demonstrations and. Agitation and the other case and legislation read 1st all that matters but the votes a big deal looking back. What how crucial was it for students to lead activism back in the fifty's and sixty's students basically came saw them they had to drive through legal apartheid the legal segregation. And for that price from going turned into Jews and blacks were killed for the price of the loot so in a town American mother mother from Michigan was killed we paid a bloody price in the legal pot that because. Of those so it sort of vested in keeping us apart and I found that the people advancing keep this squad has to exploit our part in this if you plan to seize on the ground of equal strength with a wall between them want to grow tall of multiples of fruit want to be stunted does not mean this one is better this one is less I mean the one that had photosynthesis some sunshine room but worse than that when we were separated by a wall on the other side of all this ignorance. Hatred violence but when the wall comes out you see each other a new on the football field and the game is over to be shaken out is that we have to brace what allows us to do so well on the field relations and talents because when they have the plan fuel is even and the rules are public and the goal to clear the referees of fairness was transparent we all can get along with those that you love him all the Olympics even playing pool is a big deal 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 soon on debt ridden credit card debt it cost too much to go to school means to the best minds can even apply to 10 souse must fight to make sure the Voting Rights Act remains in force and protect remnant of the Rights Act is in jeopardy because they removed the protected right to vote they're trying to move the vote up or campuses in North Carolina cannot that happen and so voting madness affordable health care system fight for that fight right and then all of us it's not enough to come in investment and live in your silo with you learn to live in the real world universe of misery became almost the poster child around the country for diversity higher ed How important is it what do you think is a little biased on the football field right now in the classroom not in the faculty not until your professors and the football team said they would not play football unless it was addressed it was in the form of that economic engine and P.R. a magnet called football that's to capture the nation's attention thank you so much I've been you know this isn't the show I would think that not the kinda fun us are enjoying this moment he would urge us in the class from watching this is taping. Going to class people to not help I'm going to get a room mate. No one you know even your silo. And then the thought feeling they have that can the you know they just group for you as they pop into us with joy in 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 I'm going to live share and grow together Thank you Reverend. Wright The Reverend Jesse Jackson found the president of the Rainbow Push Coalition America's premier civil rights leader and bankroll a Thompson.