Al Sharpton: Difference between revisions
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*[http://www.al-sharpton.com Al Sharpton] |
*[http://www.al-sharpton.com Al Sharpton] |
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*[http://www.sharptontalk.net/ Al Sharpton Home] |
*[http://www.sharptontalk.net/ Al Sharpton Home] |
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*[http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0758203519/britcomsforev-20 Al Sharpton on America] |
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*[http://www.salon.com/weekly/sharpton2.html ''Salon'' Interview with Al Sharpton] |
*[http://www.salon.com/weekly/sharpton2.html ''Salon'' Interview with Al Sharpton] |
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*[http://www.80s.com/Icons/Bios/al_sharpton.html 80s Icon Al Sharpton] |
*[http://www.80s.com/Icons/Bios/al_sharpton.html 80s Icon Al Sharpton] |
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*[http://www.jewishpost.com/jewishpost/jpn201g.html Reverend Sharpton's Anti-Semetic & Racist Broadcasts] |
*[http://www.jewishpost.com/jewishpost/jpn201g.html Reverend Sharpton's Anti-Semetic & Racist Broadcasts] |
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*[http://www.city-journal.org/html/12_3_why_blacks.html City Journal Summer 2002 | Why Blacks Don't Need Leaders] by John H. McWhorter |
*[http://www.city-journal.org/html/12_3_why_blacks.html City Journal Summer 2002 | Why Blacks Don't Need Leaders] by John H. McWhorter |
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*[http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/1995/12/09/MN74133.DT PAGE ONE -- 8 Killed In Harlem -- Arson / Gunman among dead] |
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*[http://images1.istandfor.com/images/FE/chain182siteType8/site141/client/Salsa%20-%20Sharpton.mov Al Sharpton's Salsa Dance for Fernando Ferrer's Campaign] |
*[http://images1.istandfor.com/images/FE/chain182siteType8/site141/client/Salsa%20-%20Sharpton.mov Al Sharpton's Salsa Dance for Fernando Ferrer's Campaign] |
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*[http://www.realchange.org/sharpton.htm Skeletons in Sharpton's closet] |
*[http://www.realchange.org/sharpton.htm Skeletons in Sharpton's closet] |
Revision as of 04:57, 10 February 2006
The Reverend Alfred Charles "Al" Sharpton Jr. (born October 3, 1954) is a Pentecostal minister, a political activist, civil rights activist and film actor. Sharpton ran for the Democratic Party nomination for President of the United States in 2004.
Early years
Al Sharpton was born in 1954 to a middle class family in Brooklyn, New York. His father was a boxer and landlord. Until the age of ten, he lived a comfortable life in Queens. He preached his first sermon at the age of four, and soon became famous in Brooklyn as the "wonderboy preacher," even touring with gospel singer Mahalia Jackson. Licensed and ordained a Minister at age 10 by Bishop F.D. Washington in 1964. [1] [2]
In 1963, his parents separated. Sharpton recalls in a 2002 interview "My daddy walked out on us, and he married my half-sister, Tina. Tina was my mother's daughter from a previous marriage." His mother took a job as a maid, earning very little, and qualified for welfare; the family moved from their middle class home in Queens to the projects in Brownsville. [3]
Political Activism
Sharpton's first attempts at organizing people were in high school, where he protested against poor cafeteria food and the dress code. In 1969, he was appointed by Jesse Jackson as youth director of Operation Breadbasket, a group that focused on the promotion of new and better jobs for black Americans.
In the 1970s, after two years at Brooklyn College, Sharpton became a tour manager for James Brown, where he met his future wife, Kathy Jordan, a backup singer. Sharpton and Jordan married in 1983.
In 1971, Sharpton founded the National Youth Movement to fight drugs and raise money for impoverished youth.
In 1991, Sharpton founded the National Action Network to increase voter education, services aiding the poor, supporting economically small community businesses, confronting racism and violation of civil and human rights.
He has also spoken out against cruelty to animals in a video recorded for People for The Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). [4]
Assassination Attempt
On January 12, 1991, Michael Riccardi stabbed Sharpton with a five-inch knife into his chest and tried to flee as Sharpton was preparing to lead the non-violent protest in a Brooklyn schoolyard. Sharpton suffered a punctured lung and spent five days at Coney Island Hospital. He has a 1-inch scar on his chest and says he suffered lung damage that still disrupts his breathing.
On December 12, 2003, the City of New York agreed to pay Sharpton $200,000 in damages.
Candidacies
Sharpton has run unsuccessfully for the United States Senate seat from New York in 1988, 1992, and 1994. In 1997 he ran unsuccessfully for Mayor of New York City. He has never held elected office.
On January 5, 2003 Sharpton announced his candidacy for the 2004 presidential election as a member of the Democratic Party. Precisely one year later, days before the Iowa caucus, reports of connection between Sharpton's campaign management and entrenched Republican Party organizers surfaced.[5]
Sharpton has been critical of the news media, charging it with ignoring his campaign due to deep-seated racial prejudice. [6]
Sharpton's platform includes 10 key issues:
- Increase voter registration.
- Increase political consciousness and awareness.
- Stimulate more people to get involved in the political process.
- Raise issues that would otherwise be overlooked—for example, affirmative action and anti-death penalty policy.
- Strengthen our national security by fighting for human rights, the rule of law, and economic justice at home and abroad.
- Fight to ensure women's rights.
- Deliver universal healthcare for the nation.
- Provide a solution to the current educational crisis in the nation.
- Help working people by giving them the biggest tax cuts.
- Fulfill American democracy by supporting voting rights or statehood for the 600,000 disenfranchised citizens of the District of Columbia.
On March 15, 2004, Sharpton announced his endorsement of leading Democratic candidate John Kerry. However, Sharpton did not withdraw from the race, continuing instead to campaign and striving to win delegates for the 2004 Democratic National Convention.
On December 15, 2005 Sharpton agreed to repay $100,000 in public funds he received from the federal government for his 2004 presidential campaign. The repayment was required because Sharpton had exceeded federal limits on personal expenditures for his campaign. At that time his most recent Federal Election Commission filings (from January 1, 2005) stated that Sharpton's campaign still had debts of $479,050 and owed Sharpton himself $145,146 for an item listed as "Fundraising Letter Preparation -- Kinko's." [7]
Controversy
Tawana Brawley
In the Tawana Brawley case, a 15-year-old black girl was found smeared with feces, lying in a garbage bag, her clothing torn and burned and with various slurs and epithets written on her body in charcoal. Brawley claimed that she had been assaulted and raped by six white men, some of them police officers, on November 28, 1987 in the town of Wappingers Falls, New York.
The FBI was called in, and Brawley was questioned about what had happened. She claimed she had been raped by unidentified white men. When a rape exam came back inconclusive, she changed her story, saying that she hadn't been raped, but had been sexually abused. Further examinations revealed that Brawley had received no real injuries, nor did she show signs of exposure. Testimony from her schoolmates also indicated that she had been at a local party during the time of her supposed abduction.
The incident made headlines nationwide, and her cause was taken up by Sharpton, along with Alton H. Maddox and C. Vernon Mason. The three turned the incident into a media sensation; among other acts, they identified New York prosecutor Steven Pagones as one of the men involved, despite the lack of any evidence, and they likewise attempted to implicate higher officials in the State government.
Accusations flew in both directions; an ex-boyfriend of Brawley's told Newsday that Brawley had made the attack up, and admitted so to him. A grand jury was convened, and after seven months of examining police and medical records, the jury determined that Brawley's assault was a hoax.
In 1998, Pagones was awarded $345,000 (he sought $150 Million) in a suit for defamation of character that he brought against Sharpton, Maddox, and Mason.
Accusations of racism
It is alleged that Sharpton throughout his political career has called whites "crackers" and Jews "diamond merchants," "white interlopers," and "bloodsucking Jews." Sharpton's criticism of black Marxists extended to them carrying "that German cracker's book under their arms."
Freddie's Fashion Mart
It is also alleged that after calling a Jewish shopkeeper a "white interloper," he looked on while an associate of his suggested the Jew's shop should be burned down. When a black member of the crowd did so, killing several people and himself, Sharpton initially denied having been present. When confronted with a video tape showing his presence, he said: "What's wrong with denouncing white interlopers?" Sharpton later apologized for his remarks. Other such controversies center on purported offenses by Jews against black Americans, although in one case it is alleged he verbally attacked Korean shopkeepers [citation needed]. [8] [9] [10]
Alleged Drug Trafficking
HBO's Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel aired a FBI videotape of an undercover sting operation showing Al Sharpton discussing the selling of cocaine with a FBI agent posing as a drug dealer. The meeting between Sharpton and the agent was arranged by Michael Franzese, a Mafia captain who had a relationship with Sharpton and Don King. Sharpton is offered a 10% commission for arranging drug sales. Sharpton mostly nods and allows the FBI agent to do most of the talking but at one point he does incriminate himself when he states, "Well, if [the unnamed buyer] can, if he's gonna do it, he'll do it much more than that,"
The drug deal was never consummated, and no charges were brought against Sharpton as a result of the tape. Law enforcement sources have said the FBI used the tape as leverage to enlist Sharpton as a government informant against fellow black activists and others. "The question is: Why would the government say that?" Sharpton said, and denied he was a snitch. "If they have an agreement with me, where is it?"
Sharpton denounced the tape as a set-up. "If anything it will rally people around me," Sharpton said. "For 18 years, the government has been trying to find a way to get me."
LoanMax Spokesman
More recently, Sharpton has been criticized for appearing in advertisements for LoanMax, an automobile title loan company. Loanmax has been accused of predatory lending charging fees which are the equivalent of 300% APR loans, and for marketing them to primarily poor, urban and African American audiences. The ads featuring Sharpton, were to be run in predominantly African American markets.[14][15]
Celebrity status
Because of his demeanor and personality, Sharpton has become something of a minor celebrity and has been featured in many movies and television shows. He had cameo appearances in the movies Cold Feet, Bamboozled and Mr. Deeds and in episodes of the television shows New York Undercover, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Girlfriends, My Wife and Kids, and Boston Legal. He also hosted the original Spike TV reality television show, I Hate My Job. He also played a small role in the Spike Lee movie, Malcolm X. During the 2005 Tony Awards, Sharpton appeared in a number put on by the cast of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. He was recently a guest on Weekends at the DL on Comedy Central. He was recently featured dancing to salsa music in television ads for the Fernando Ferrer campaign for the New York City mayoral election, 2005. [16] He has also hosted the late-night comedy show Saturday Night Live.
In June 2005, Sharpton signed a contract with Matrix Media, Incorporated, to produce and host a live two-hour daily talk program, which did not air. However, in November 2005, Sharpton signed with Radio One to host a daily national talk radio program. The program started on January 30, 2006.
In late 2005, Sharpton indicated that he was considering starring in a sitcom, tentatively called Al in the Family, which would be an updated version of All in the Family. Later in the year he decided he would not be in the show, instead concentrating on a possible bid for President of the United States in 2008.
Quotes
- Regarding Michael Riccardi's attempt on his life:
Though there were over 200 policemen standing around, none of them made a move to grab him.
- Regarding the Democratic party:
I do believe the Democratic party has moved far to the right. I do believe that the party has a bunch of elephants running around in donkey clothes.
- Regarding the federal government's response to Hurricane Katrina:
I wrestled with this, even over the last few days, as I sat and stood and walked in Louisiana, where I saw people ravaged, lives torn. I thought about the fact that we need a man that's strong enough to bring us through 9/11 but compassionate enough that if Katrina hits, will make sure that poor people are not the scapegoats of a natural disaster.
- Regarding police brutality:
Crime is going down everywhere but in the New York City Police Department.
- Regarding George W. Bush:
We have defeated Jim Crow, but now we have to deal with his son, James Crow Jr., esquire.
- Regarding terrorists:
Who defines terrorists? Today's terrorist is tomorrow's friend.
- Regarding achievement in black history:
White folks were in caves while we were building empires.... We taught philosophy, astrology, and mathematics before Socrates and those Greek homos. [16] [17]
Works
- Sharpton, Al, Go and Tell Pharaoh (hardcover), Doubleday, 1996. ISBN 0385475837
- Sharpton, Al, Al on America (hardcover), Dafina Books, 2002. ISBN 0758203500
- Sharpton, Al, Al on America (paperback), Dafina Books, 2003. ISBN 0758203519
External links
- Al Sharpton
- Al Sharpton Home
- Salon Interview with Al Sharpton
- 80s Icon Al Sharpton
- Text of Democratic National Convention 2004 Speech
- The grand jury report on the Brawley case
- A CNN story on the Pagones suit
- A pro-Brawley article on her first public appearance in years
- Sharpton Campaign Assisted by Republican Organizers - (Village Voice)
- Power Dem: Jay Nordlinger on Al Sharpton's Rise to power. National Review, March 20, 2000.
- The Harvard Salient: April 15, 1999: Up Front
- Salon | New Year's wish for the Reverend Al
- Byron York on Howard Dean & Race on National Review Online
- Reverend Sharpton's Anti-Semetic & Racist Broadcasts
- City Journal Summer 2002 | Why Blacks Don't Need Leaders by John H. McWhorter
- Al Sharpton's Salsa Dance for Fernando Ferrer's Campaign
- Skeletons in Sharpton's closet
- 1954 births
- Living people
- Brooklynites
- American radio personalities
- African American politicians
- African Americans
- Christian ministers
- Pro-choice politicians
- Civil rights activists
- David E. Kelley actors
- Film actors
- Actors and actresses appearing on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
- New York politicians
- Pentecostals
- Social justice
- Civil disobedience
- Debaters
- Anti-Semitic people