While at the University of Chicago, I learned to look at politics in a new way. It wasn’t just that racism, war, poverty, and other social evils must be opposed. It was that there was a cause-and-effect dynamic and an interconnectedness between all aspects of society. There was a relationship between wealth, power, and the perpetuation of capitalism. While providing a bit of financial support for the civil rights movement in the South, our chapter of CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) began to focus on racism in Chicago. The University of Chicago was and is located in a largely African-American community. It turned out that the university was a major landlord in the area, and it also turned out that the university owned segregated housing. Our CORE chapter sent white couples and black couples into the university-owned housing, pretending to be looking for an apartment to rent. A black couple would find that there were just no apartments available. A few hours later, a white couple would find a choice of apartments in the same building. After unsuccessful negotiations with the university to desegregate their housing, our CORE chapter staged a sit-in demonstration in the administration building. It was one of the first student civil rights sit-ins in the North. Tonight I’m back in Chicago to keep our movement going forward. Our campaign is about all of us standing together, as one nation, to demand a better life for all—black, white, Latino, Asian American, and Native American. If we are to be successful in that goal, we must confront one of the most contentious and intractable issues facing our country—the same issue that I protested in Chicago 50 years ago—the ugly stain of racism.

berniesandersさん(@berniesanders)が投稿した動画 -

バーニー・サンダースのインスタグラム(berniesanders) - 3月4日 13時25分


While at the University of Chicago, I learned to look at politics in a new way. It wasn’t just that racism, war, poverty, and other social evils must be opposed. It was that there was a cause-and-effect dynamic and an interconnectedness between all aspects of society. There was a relationship between wealth, power, and the perpetuation of capitalism.

While providing a bit of financial support for the civil rights movement in the South, our chapter of CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) began to focus on racism in Chicago. The University of Chicago was and is located in a largely African-American community. It turned out that the university was a major landlord in the area, and it also turned out that the university owned segregated housing. Our CORE chapter sent white couples and black couples into the university-owned housing, pretending to be looking for an apartment to rent. A black couple would find that there were just no apartments available. A few hours later, a white couple would find a choice of apartments in the same building. After unsuccessful negotiations with the university to desegregate their housing, our CORE chapter staged a sit-in demonstration in the administration building. It was one of the first student civil rights sit-ins in the North.

Tonight I’m back in Chicago to keep our movement going forward. Our campaign is about all of us standing together, as one nation, to demand a better life for all—black, white, Latino, Asian American, and Native American. If we are to be successful in that goal, we must confront one of the most contentious and intractable issues facing our country—the same issue that I protested in Chicago 50 years ago—the ugly stain of racism.


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