Sharpton criticizes Democrats over stimulus bill
The Rev. Al Sharpton criticized Democrats on Wednesday for "diluting"
education portions of the economic stimulus bill in order to get re-elected.
In a speech at Middlebury College, the civil rights leader also encouraged
collegians to become vocal advocates for change.

"I am a civil rights activist and advocate," he told a packed house of 675
people. "I do not seek, as many who seek political office, to be appreciated
or liked. I do not seek approval as opposed to clarity, unlike some
politicians. I was concerned to see that some of the Democratic members of
the Senate took out the portions that gave real vision and strength to
president Obama's stimulus plan and diluted educational funding. It seems
they were more concerned about midterm elections than vision."

In addition to those who got into the campus chapel to hear him, another 700
students crowded satellite venues on campus to watch him speak on a
closed-circuit video feed.

Jeanine Busily, 21, who helped organize the event, said Sharpton was invited
to the exclusive private college to speak because of growing student
interest in activism.

"People wanted to hear from a sort of political figure that also dealt with
issues of social justice," Busily said. "We wanted to be able to speak with
someone about how Obama being elected changes the fight for social justice."


She wouldn't say how much he was paid for the appearance, but that the fee
and production costs combined were about $20,000.

Sharpton said that despite the election of President Barack Obama, the civil
rights fight isn't over.

"Many feel because we made this huge, historical step forward, we no longer
need advocacy," Sharpton said. "We won the right to change, but we did not
win the change. There is work yet to be done," he said, citing equality gaps
in health care, the justice system and the economy.

Stressing the need for advocacy, he used the analogy of a thermostat - which
changes or pushes temperature - and a thermometer, which merely records it.
One student asked him which applied to Obama.

"I think he's a politician that has been a thermostat and has a thermometer
agenda," Sharpton said. "And he had to have that kind of agenda to get
elected. I've known President Obama for many years, we don't agree on
everything. But I think if he at least holds to what he said, probably he
can still make a dramatic difference."

Of newly appointed Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele,
the first black to hold the position, Sharpton said: "He's a likable guy.

"I think he will try to bring some people - particularly from the black
church - over to the Republican side, with his right-to-life and anti-gay
messages. And I will resist. Is he a nice man? Yes. Will I smile while I
fight him on those issues? Yes, but fight I will."


-- 
"I'm selfish, impatient, and a little insecure. I make mistakes, I am out of
control, and at times hard to handle, but if you can't handle me at my
worst, then you sure as hell don't deserve me at my best." ~Marilyn Monroe

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