People who are much too sensitive to demand of cripples that they run races ask of the poor that they get up and act just like everyone else in the society.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
A calling is you feel - you look out and see the need - maybe it's the need for the poor, to help poor people. Maybe it's the need to get involved in the race problem, as Martin Luther King was - felt called.
It's a sad commentary when I have to say that sometimes in our country we are real sensitive to race.
To be a poor man is hard, but to be a poor race in a land of dollars is the very bottom of hardships.
I am true to my own race. I wish to see all done that can be done for their encouragement, to assist them in acquiring property, in becoming intelligent, enlightened, useful, valuable citizens.
I got into the race because I'm concerned for my children, and for the opportunities they don't have. Really, it's for the same concerns that the people of the 16th district have. They're concerned about jobs.
Poverty affects people of all races.
When you see in places like Africa and parts of Asia abject poverty, hungry children and malnutrition around you, and you look at yourself as being people who have well being and comforts, I think it takes a very insensitive, tough person not to feel they need to do something.
People who are given whatever they want soon develop a sense of entitlement and rapidly lose their sense of proportion.
A race is a work of art that people can look at and be affected in as many ways they're capable of understanding.
Candidates don't want to be associated with poor people, people who have jobs or are ugly; they want to be associated with a certain middle class demographic, so as a result they leave those others out completely.