Examples of using Jesse jackson in English and their translations into Hebrew
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Programming
Jesse Jackson's been here.
Who's the president… Jesse Jackson?
Dude, Jesse Jackson said it's okay!
My dad apologized to Jesse Jackson.
Jesse Jackson will be our next president.
My guest tonight is Reverend Jesse Jackson.
Jesse Jackson said that thing about slavery.
Okay, I will ask Donna to talk to Jesse Jackson.
You better not never let Jesse Jackson hear you talking like that.
Jesse Jackson, clergyman and civil rights activist from Illinois.
One world, one people, just like Jesse Jackson envisioned.
Jesse Jackson on Barack Obama:"I want to cut his nuts off".
Oh, Idris Elba, Tom Selleck, Al Jarreau, Jesse Jackson on the balcony.
Jesse Jackson- Never look down on anybody unless you helping him up.
He is the only model for black community;I don't care Jesse Jackson.
Gore wants to pull Jesse Jackson out of Florida as quickly as possible.
Never look down on someone unless you're helping up.”- Jesse Jackson.
I'm gonna have Jesse Jackson down here on a moped, with Al Sharpton in the sidecar.
Never look down on anybody unless you are helping him up”- Jesse Jackson.
Martin Luther King, Jesse Jackson… and you got to give it up to Rosa Parks, period.
He also wrote campaign songs for the presidential campaigns of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Henry A. Wallace, and, in 1984, Jesse Jackson.
His opposition included Reverend Jesse Jackson and Senator Gary Hart from Colorado.
I wish that something like The Root had had the money tocover the Obama campaign the way I covered the Jesse Jackson campaign,” he said.
Bill Cosby and Oprah Winfrey are the chief majors. But Jesse Jackson, Colin Powell, and Gordon from Sesame Street, they're members too.
Then he made a serious gaffe by announcing to an audience of New York City's Jewish community that, if nominated,he would consider Reverend Jesse Jackson as a vice presidential candidate.
Organizers said the rally, led by activist-politician the Rev. Jesse Jackson and several state elected officials, was a show of outrage over the October 2014 death of Laquan McDonald, 17, and what they see as racial bias in U.S. policing.
