Al Sharpton quotes:

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  • In 1999, I was in St. Louis with Martin Luther King III as we led protests against the state's failure to hire minority contractors for highway construction projects. We went at dawn on a summer day with over a thousand people and performed acts of civil disobedience.

  • As I often say, we have come a long way from the days of slavery, but in 2014, discrimination and inequality still saturate our society in modern ways. Though racism may be less blatant now in many cases, its existence is undeniable.

  • I could have easily been a statistic. Growing up in Brooklyn, N.Y., it was easy - a little too easy - to get into trouble. Surrounded by poor schools, lack of resources, high unemployment rates, poverty, gangs and more, I watched as many of my peers fell victim to a vicious cycle of diminished opportunities and imprisonment.

  • There's no reason why children in inner cities or rural areas do not receive the same quality education or opportunities as those in suburbs or wealthy neighborhoods. If we truly believe in giving all citizens a chance to pursue happiness and pursue their goals, then we cannot continue to marginalize entire groups of people.

  • The resignation of Attorney General Eric Holder is met with both pride and disappointment by the Civil Rights community. We are proud that he has been the best Attorney General on Civil Rights in U.S. history and disappointed because he leaves at a critical time when we need his continued diligence most.

  • Following Michael Brown's death, I went to Ferguson and met with his parents. I stood with them as they tried to hold their heads high and deal with both their immense loss and the larger issues of police-community relations.

  • Everything from who sits on your local board of education to the prosecutors and judicial appointments in your area and much more are all impacted by who holds political office.

  • Either we need to redefine what probable cause means and say that police are not subject to it, or we arrest officers right away just as we would with any other person accused of committing a crime. Either we write new laws or enforce existing ones; we cannot have it both ways.

  • Let me be clear: as I have said repeatedly, I do not believe that all police officers are bad, nor do I believe that most are bad. But there must be a transparent, impartial and fair system to judge those that engage in criminal or unethical acts.

  • If the black vote does not come out in big numbers in the age of Ferguson and voter ID, it will empower our adversaries and enhance our marginalization.

  • We're not anti-police... we're anti-police brutality.

  • From racial profiling and being pulled over just for 'driving while black' to this new phenomenon of killing unarmed people out of some preconceived idea of fear, our lives and our children's lives are not being valued.

  • If it weren't for the mentorship and guidance from people like my mother, James Brown and others, I wouldn't have been able to make something of my life.

  • I very rarely read any fiction. I love biographies; I read about all kinds of people. I love theology and some philosophy.

  • We're not willing to give black leaders second chances because, in most cases, we're not willing to give them first chances.

  • When you loot or behave violently, you give grounds to those that try to justify illegal police abuse. You become the poster child for them to say, 'See, we have no choice but to shoot and kill, or use a chokehold, because just look at the way they behave.'

  • The horrific cases in Ferguson, in Staten Island with the death of Eric Garner, and all across the country serve as stark reminders that we must have a say in who polices us, and how that policing is done. We must, we must, let our voices be heard on Election Day.

  • When we look at the situation in Ferguson, Missouri and the tragic death of Michael Brown, we are reminded of the importance of who we elect to our city councils, who sits on our local board of education committees, who we pick to represent us in Congress, in the Senate and more.

  • Local prosecutors work alongside local police officers on a regular basis and are therefore conflicted when it comes to prosecuting those same officers. They are under extreme pressure from local police unions and from rank-and-file cops.

  • Countries around the world have their own immigration laws and methods of dealing with a recurring theme: desperate people searching for peace from volatile parts of the world. And nations everywhere thrive and prosper from the contributions of immigrants and the children of immigrants - including right here in the U.S.

  • National Action Network, the group I founded, has affiliates or chapters in over 40 cities around the country.

  • You don't need any indictment in order to arrest someone; probable cause is sufficient to arrest civilians, so it must be enough to arrest police.

  • The right wing always mobilizes around constitutional amendments: the right to bear arms, school prayer.

  • As a preacher who has spent significant time in churches and houses of worship all across the country, I can tell you firsthand that religious liberty and freedom are principles that can never be infringed upon.

  • Civilians are arrested every single day - including innocent ones - and they must wait until their day in court in order to argue their side of the story. Police officers must be subjected to the same rules.

  • One of the reasons I get so much joy out of my own children's childhoods is that I'm having my first childhood myself.

  • When people discuss the 1960s and the great Civil Rights Era, they often speak in romantic terms as if there wasn't immense work put in, and as if there wasn't immense sacrifice that took place. But none of those battles were easily fought and won; there were sustained movements behind them.

  • If O.J. had been accused of killing his black wife, you would not have seen the same passion stirred up.

  • When the culture of police departments is sometimes infused with bias or preconceived ideas against certain groups, there needs to be reform and retraining throughout. And unfortunately, we cannot rely on local departments to police themselves; we need intervention from the top.

  • In Ferguson, there are witnesses who say Brown had his hands up when he was shot. That should be enough probable cause to go to trial to then determine if Officer Wilson is guilty or not. It is at trial that he can then defend himself and his attorneys can present their own witnesses and their own defense.

  • 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.

  • It is up to us to change laws on the books like 'Stand Your Ground' laws and push elected officials to enact regulations that hold police officers to the same standards as the rest of society. This is why we vote.

  • Like myself, President Obama is the father of two daughters. He understands the obstacles that they face as women, but he also understands the emergency of the state of young black men in America.

  • The United States isn't a dictatorship ruling with a brutal army and an iron fist, so our police departments must understand that they are there to serve and protect us - all of us. And when they do commit crimes, they must be arrested and prosecuted like anyone else, bottom line.

  • The boxing world is full of all kinds of corruption.

  • I was raised by a single mother who made a way for me. She used to scrub floors as a domestic worker, put a cleaning rag in her pocketbook and ride the subways in Brooklyn so I would have food on the table. But she taught me as I walked her to the subway that life is about not where you start, but where you're going. That's family values.

  • It seems some have chosen to ignore or have simply forgotten the big-picture vision promoted by Dr. King and his kin.

  • My ordination in the Church of God in Christ was at age 9, and I later became a Baptist minister, which I am today.

  • I always beat the sun up in the morning. It's the secret to why I'm double trouble.

  • I've seen too much in life to give up.

  • I've never done anything else in my life other than preach and be an activist. Way before I was known.

  • My message to everyone: the next time you hear about migrant children near the border, just picture them as your own. Then think what you would want our government to do.

  • The dream was not to put one black family in the White House, the dream was to make everything equal in everybody's house.

  • In every era going back to Lincoln with Frederick Douglass, presidents talk to those that were leading at that time.

  • I won vice president of my student body in high school. That doesn't mean anything.

  • If Charlton Heston can have a constitutional right carry a rifle, why can't grandma have a constitutional right to health care?

  • Not graduating high school on time leads to fewer chances of attending college and obtaining good paying jobs, and creates instead higher chances of incarceration and unemployment.

  • James Brown became my father. He would talk to me the way a father talked to a son. He became the father I never had.

  • Dr. King used Gandhi's commitment to non-violence and to passive resistance.

  • If you play the theatrics too much, you get in the way of your own cause.

  • I was the first candidate to come out against this war, spoke at every anti-war march.

  • We are engaged in immediate conversations with the White House on deliberations over a successor whom we hope will continue in the general direction of Attorney General Holder.

  • I'm never going to be fat - never again. I'm going to make it easy on my pallbearers.

  • We need an amendment that gives us the right to vote protected by the federal government and the Constitution.

  • My ministry's always been one of social activism. I think a responsible minister must be at some levels involved in the social order.

  • While the rest of the country waves the flag of Americana, we understand we are not part of that. We don't owe America anything - America owes us.

  • I think first of all, the United States has got to adopt a policy of befriending and creating allies around the world...

  • I've never seen an effective boycott that didn't work.

  • I'm projected as an ambulance chaser, but I'm more the ambulance. People call me because they know I will come.... I have never fought a case where they didn't ask me to come. People have this picture like I'm sitting up in bed at night with a walkie-talkie. "You hear anything? Oh, let's run! It's Virginia today!"... Every victim calls us.... "Who put Sharpton in charge?" The victim!

  • During my 2004 presidential campaign, I was fond of saying that it was high time for the Christian right to meet the right Christians.

  • We have defeated Jim Crow, but now we have to deal with his son, James Crow Jr., esquire.

  • I understand deficit spending. I was born in deficit spending.

  • I do believe that the party has a bunch of elephants running around in donkey clothes.

  • I grew up in the 1950s and '60s, when it was almost a holiday when a black act would go on Ed Sullivan.

  • Dr. King's general principles are universal. But the things he confronted took place in another era.

  • Getting Democrats organized is like herding cats.

  • I've seen enough things to know that if you just keep on going, if you turn the corner, the sun will be shining.

  • If Jews want to get it on, tell them to pin their yarmulkes back and come over to my house.

  • It was better walk with dignity than ride in shame. A lot of people in Cincinnati are saying, "Rather than have the continual problems of police brutality and economic disparity, I'm willing to make some sacrifices." And I think that they ought to be respected for doing that.

  • Any use of the names of Eric Garner and Michael Brown, in connection with any violence or killing of police, is reprehensible and against the pursuit of justice in both cases.

  • The United States government has the obligation to educate all young people in this country.

  • If you can get the proper definition of trouble, then we can find out who the real troublemakers are.

  • I'm a patriot in the truest sense of the word.

  • Throughout my years championing for civil rights, analyzing politics and advocating on behalf of the voiceless, I am disturbed the most when harmless children suffer because of politics or detrimental policies.

  • In Staten Island, when you have video showing the alleged chokehold used on Eric Garner, why not go to trial and have the officer(s) explain the tape, and then this jury can determine guilt or innocence? The tape should guarantee that there should be a trial.

  • Demonstrations must be dignified and nonviolent, as the overwhelming protests in Ferguson and Staten Island have been. Do not confuse anarchists who don't want the system to work and thugs who want to exploit a situation with the majority who from day one have operated with impeccable nonviolence and clear goals.

  • Bill Clinton strikes me as the kind of guy who goes wherever the polls lead him, rather than leading the polls.

  • As I stood and gave the eulogy for young Michael Brown last week, I kept thinking about the fact that this child should have been in college instead of laying in a coffin.

  • We cannot reform institutional racism or systemic policies if we are not actively engaged. It's not enough to simply complain about injustice; the only way to prevent future injustice is to create the society we would like to see, one where we are all equal under the law.

  • If companies can refuse to provide coverage for women, what other objections to the Affordable Care Act will we see based on 'religious grounds'? For that matter, will 'religious freedom' be used as an excuse to discriminate against other minorities and disenfranchised groups across the board? Where will it end?

  • In New York, you are competing with Times Square lights and all of that, so you've got to be 300 pounds and crazy to get anyone's attention. Then, you can refine yourself. I always knew under those 300 pounds and tracksuits was a refined, slim, dignified man.

  • Evangelicals catapulted George W. Bush back to the White House.

  • My organization, National Action Network (NAN), was on the ground talking and meeting with people in Ferguson, just as we did in Staten Island following Eric Garner's death.

  • In order to establish peace, you must have fair justice for everyone.

  • I've learned how to measure what I say. Al Sharpton in 1986 was trying to be heard. I was a local guy and was like, 'Y'all are ignoring us.'

  • I could take all the cartoons in the tabloid newspapers, but I couldn't take my daughter punching me in the belly and asking why I was so fat. That was my inspiration to lose the weight. And probably the last time anyone hurt my feelings.

  • We may switch presidents, but we`re just going to switch legs and keep on marching.

  • White folks was in the caves while we [blacks] was building empires ... We built pyramids before Donald Trump ever knew what architecture was ... we taught philosophy and astrology and mathematics before Socrates and them Greek homos ever got around to it.

  • As a Baptist minister, I don't have the right to impose my views on anyone else. If committed gay and lesbian couples want to marry, that is their business; none of us should stand in their way

  • I am in hell already. I am in Israel.

  • Some issues you just - you certainly you have to defend yourself, but you certainly don`t have to denigrate others.

  • There are white n*ggers. I've seen a lot of white n*ggers in my time.

  • One of the things that`s offensive is saying in the fifth district there`s nothing going on. This is a very vast district. The congressman happens to represent me. And while there are always more things that we can do in every community, this is a very diverse district with all kinds of wonderful things.

  • So (if) some cracker come and tell you 'Well, my mother and father blood go back to the Mayflower,' you better hold your pocket. That ain't nothing to be proud of. That means their forefathers was crooks.

  • America has to make America become a better place for all Americans, and that`s all of us participating.

  • What do we want? Dead cops. When do we want it? Now.

  • It`s a difficult thing for a city to be sued by the department of justice and to be told that your police department is systematically failing to serve the people of the state or the city.

  • We need to make some real fundamental change from the Constitution down in this country.

  • But resist we much. We must, and we will much- about that- be committed.

  • Who defines terrorists? Today's terrorist is tomorrow's friend.

  • I can't see how an unarmed man rejecting a drug deal ended up dead.

  • Jeff Sessions, the person who`s likely to become our next attorney general, is striking a very different tone from our current attorney general, Loretta Lynch, who announced a consent decree with the city of Baltimore.

  • The Baltimore Police Department had engaged in a pattern of practice of conduct that violated the constitution and federal law, and this conduct had eroded trust and to deprive the people of Baltimore of the rights and the protections guaranteed to every American.

  • James Brown lives, as long as someone steps out of their body and dances uncontrollably.

  • Crime is going down everywhere but in the New York City Police Department.

  • The promise of America is one immigration policy for all who seek to enter our shores, whether they come from Mexico, Haiti or Canada, there must be one set of rules for everybody. We cannot welcome those to come and then try and act as though any culture will not be respected or treated inferior. We cannot look at the Latino community and preach 'one language.' No one gave them an English test before they sent them to Iraq to fight for America.

  • I think everybody understood what happened, why this consent decree came about after the Freddie Gray situation. There was tension on both sides.

  • If I use the media, even with tricks, to publicize a black youth being shot in the back in Teaneck, New Jersey... then I should be praised for it, and it's more of a comment on them than me that it would take tricks to make them cover the loss of life.

  • Somebody had to bring the truth to the doorstep of this president.

  • So we want to make sure that happens is that we build a relationship with the police department and the community that results in better policing and better cooperation with the community.

  • I`m deeply concerned about Jeff Sessions, who has clearly expressed opposition to the use of consent decrees and has advanced a lot of this states` rights rhetoric.

  • I wanted to say to Governor Dean, don't be hard on yourself about hooting and hollering. If I had spent the money you did and got 18 percent, I'd still be in Iowa hooting and hollering.

  • I always go by instinct and then wrestle with where by instinct brought me.

  • Don't talk to us like we ignint!

  • But we believed if we kept on working, if we kept on marching, if we kept on voting, if we kept on believing, we would make America beautiful for everybody.

  • It does not appear, nor is there any reason to believe that [ Jeff Sessions] will put policing reform front and center in the way that this justice department has, and that will mean that we cast aside eight years of hard work, blood, sweat and tears that have gone into bringing cities and mayors and communities to the table to address what truly is a national crisis.

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