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If someone tried to deprive you of your rights, you've got to resist it. You've got to resent it. Y
If someone tried to deprive you of your rights, you've got to resist it. You've got to resent it. Y
If someone tried to deprive you of your rights, you've got to resist it. You've got to resent it. Y
If someone tried to deprive you of your rights, you've got to resist it. You've got to resent it. Y
If someone tried to deprive you of your rights, you've got to resist it. You've got to resent it. Y
If someone tried to deprive you of your rights, you've got to resist it. You've got to resent it. Y
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A. Philip Randolph:
I don't ever remember a single day of hopelessness. I knew from the history of the labor movement,A. Philip Randolph:
I have an inner satisfaction of having done what I thought was right at the time which I thought waA. Philip Randolph:
The Negro was a political football between his former slave master and Northern political adventureA. Philip Randolph:
I suggest that ten thousand Negroes march on Washington, D.C., the capital of the Nation, with theA. Philip Randolph:
If we have white persons in the March, we are certain to have trouble with the Communists, and it mA. Philip Randolph:
Patriotism has no appeal to us; justice has. Party has no weight with us; principle has. Loyalty isA. Philip Randolph:
Debs is greater than Lincoln. Debs is the spokesman of the great struggling working class of all raA. Philip Randolph:
Lincoln was the spokesman of the rising capitalist class of the North, who viewed the emancipationA. Philip Randolph:
Lincoln merely nominally freed the bodies of Negroes. But Debs would free the bodies and minds of NA. Philip Randolph:
Negroes are in no mood to shoulder guns for democracy abroad while they are denied democracy here a