I respectfully disagree.
Living in the shadows of NYC, we see alot more then most people.
Jesse Jackson is a good man. Yes he's made mistakes in the past (who hasn't), but Jackson has "manned up / owned up" to them, and he's a passionate sincere man.
I have to disagree with your take on Mr. Jackson.
How soon we forget.
For decades Jesse Jackson has intimidated numerous companies into
donating hundreds of millions of dollars to his organization by
suing, protesting, and boycotting them under the guise of
redressing racism. All the while, Jackson benefited himself
first and foremost. Among the big players are Texaco, Coca-
Cola, Ford, Anheuser-Busch and several telecommunications
giants.
As early as 1982 Jackson launched a boycott of Anheuser-
Busch because it purportedly did not have enough black-owned
distributorships nationwide. The beer company eventually
contributed $510,000 to Jackson and established a $10 million
fund to help blacks buy distributorships. When Jackson’s two
sons (Yusef and Jonathan) purchased a River North distributorship
in Chicago for an estimated $30 million, Jackson dropped
the boycott and became the company’s best friend.
Jackson has gone so far as to lobby the Federal
Communications Commission to block companies seeking
government approval to merge, until they donate money to his
organization. In the late 1990s, he opposed the merger of
telecommunications giants SBC and Ameritech, saying it would
be detrimental to low-income customers.
Money changed Jackson’s mind, however. He became the
deal’s biggest cheerleader when the companies donated
$500,000 to one of his Rainbow/PUSH funds.
Shortly after that, he opposed a merger of AT&T and TCI but,
once again, reversed his position after AT&T wrote a $425,000
check. Fearing the wrath of Jackson’s racism accusations,
other telecommunications giants – including GTE and
Bell-Atlantic – followed suit with big contributions.