
07-17-2008, 03:41 AM
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What Else Jesse Jackson Said on That FNC Tape
What Else Jesse Jackson Said on That FNC Tape
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TVNewser has been sent the transcript of what Jesse Jackson said Sunday morning July 6, as he prepared for an interview on Fox & Friends Weekend. Below is the partial transcript we received in our tips box, and confirmed to be authentic by Fox News Channel representatives.
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Barack...he's talking down to black people...telling n—s how to behave.
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So, yes. Jesse Jackson did use the "N" word.
But it was not directed at Barack Obama. Fox News and Bill O'Reilly have maintained there was more on the tape, but that the un-aired portion was not relevant to the issue at hand: about whether Obama was "talking down" to the black community.
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Now Double J has a small problem with this (and why Fox wouldn't show this is puzzling...Maybe they want him as a "strategist" sometime in life)...
here's the issue...
Double J dropping the "N-word" don't confront me...(as long as I get my money by next Friday)...
But let's see what the Hymietown Hypocrite said when Michael Richards (aka Cosmo Kramer) dropped the N-word not too long ago...
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In the last week, Richards has become better known for hurling the N-word at black hecklers after attempting a lynching joke during the same riff and, later, for apologizing—or trying to, anyway.
“My best friends were African-Americans,” Richards said Sunday on Jackson’s Premiere Radio Network show.
The Jackson gig was the latest in Richards’ reaching-out effort to African-American men who have run for president. Before the radio appearance, the actor was said to have placed contrite phone calls to Jackson and the Reverend Al Sharpton. There was no word if Alan Keyes, a 1996 and 2000 Republican presidential candidate, was sought out.
On his show, Jackson said he hoped the Richards “crisis” would create an opportunity.
On Monday, the civil-rights leader joined others in calling on everyone—blacks, whites, Seinfeld players, presumably included—to refrain from using the N-word, on stage and off.
“Its roots are rooted in hatred and pain and degradation,” Jackson told a Los Angeles press conference. “And whether it’s hatred toward African-Americans or whether it’s self-hatred, a concession toward it is still wrong.”
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Do as I say...Not as I do... 
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