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Jesse Lee Peterson
Born (1949-05-22) May 22, 1949 (age 75)
Occupation(s)author, television and radio show host, lecturer
Political partyRepublican
WebsiteBrotherhood Organization of a New Destiny

Jesse Lee Peterson (born May 22, 1949) is president and founder of The Brotherhood Organization of a New Destiny (BOND), an American nonprofit, 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to a conservative agenda among African Americans. He has hosted a cable TV program and a syndicated radio talk show.[1]

Early life

Peterson was born in Midway, Alabama, and raised in Comer Hill, Alabama. His mother and father moved to Gary, Indiana, and East Chicago, Indiana, respectively, where they separately started new families of their own. Peterson was left to be raised in Comer Hill by his grandparents who worked on the same white-owned plantation that his ancestors labored on as slaves a century earlier. As a teenager, Peterson moved in with his mother and stepfather in Gary and eventually settled in Los Angeles, California, as a young adult.[2]

Radio show

Jesse Lee Peterson hosted the nationally syndicated Jesse Lee Peterson Show radio talk show on the Information Radio Network until December 30, 2005.

Cable TV show

Peterson hosted the Jesse Lee Peterson Show.[citation needed]

Statements

Peterson has established the annual “National Day of Repudiation of Jesse Jackson” event.[3]

On September 21, 2005, Peterson penned a column for WorldNetDaily, in which he suggested that the majority of the African-American people stranded in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina were "welfare-pampered", "lazy" and "immoral". Peterson also criticized New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin for blaming President George W. Bush for his lack of response to the crisis, stating that "responsibility to perform legally and practically fell first on the Mayor of New Orleans."[4]

On February 28, 2006, as a member of a student panel discussion at the University of California, Irvine on the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy, Peterson described Islam as an "evil religion", and stated that extremist Muslims "hate us [America] because we are a Christian nation and we support Israel."[5] The event was sponsored by the United American Committee and College Republicans, and gained national attention in part due to his remarks.[6]

In January 2010, Peterson issued a statement calling for the resignation of Republican National Committee chair Michael Steele, saying "Michael Steele is a weak leader and he needs to resign or be fired. We need someone who's not afraid to boldly promote strong conservative Republican ideas. The only reason Steele is still RNC Chair is because he's black and the party is terrified of the implications of firing him."[7]

He has also claimed that "Barack Obama hates white people, especially white men" and that "Barack Obama is Jeremiah Wright Jr. He is the NAACP and the Congressional Black Caucus! He embodies the aspirations of every left-wing black group that wants to tear down this country and take power away from the "oppressive" white man. He's not an obvious race hustler like Al Sharpton or Jesse Jackson; but Obama is a smooth pathological liar—with a wicked heart".[8] Peterson has also thanked "God and white people" for slavery adding that if it wasn't for the slave trade, blacks might have never made it to the promise land and described slave ships as akin to "being on a crowded airplane". Peterson is friends with Sean Hannity and is a frequent guest on his TV show.[9]

He has said women should not be allowed to vote:

Women cannot handle power. It's not in them to handle power in the right way. [...] I think that one of the greatest mistakes America made was to allow women the opportunity to vote. We should've never turned this over to women. [...] It was a big mistake. [...] And these women are voting in the wrong people. They're voting in people who are evil who agrees [sic] with them who're gonna take us down this pathway of destruction. And this probably was the reason they didn't allow women to vote when men were men. Because men in the good old days understood the nature of the woman. They were not afraid to deal with it. And they understood that, you let them take over, this is what would happen.[10] [11]

Jesse Jackson lawsuit

On January 17, 2006, Peterson was a party to the case Jesse Lee Peterson, et al., v. Jesse Jackson, et al. (BC 266505), in Los Angeles County Superior Court, after a ruling the previous week by Judge George H. Wu. Judicial Watch filed the civil lawsuit against Jackson, his son Jonathan, and others on behalf of Peterson, who was the alleged victim of a physical and verbal assault at an event hosted by Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH Coalition and Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. in December 2001.[12][13]

On January 27, 2006, a Los Angeles jury dismissed all of the counts except one, in which the jury deadlocked. The parties settled the remaining charge out of court.[14]

Affiliations

Peterson is a member of Choose Black America, an organization of African Americans who oppose illegal immigration to the United States.[15] He is a member of the advisory board of Project 21, a conservative African American organization[16]. He serves on the national advisory board of Accuracy in Media,[17] and is a former board member of the California Christian Coalition.[18]

Books by Peterson

References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ A Man Alone: Jesse Lee Peterson versus the "black experience" http://www.city-journal.org/2010/20_1_jesse-lee-peterson.html
  3. ^ The Nation Magazine The Minister of Minstrelsy March 24, 2005.
  4. ^ WorldNetDaily. Moral poverty cost blacks in New Orleans. September 21, 2005.
  5. ^ FoxNews.com and Associated Press. Calif. Campus in Uproar Over Muslim Cartoons. March 1, 2006.
  6. ^ UnitedAmericanCommittee.com. The Unveiling of the Cartoons & A Discussion To Confront Terror: A panel discussion at U.C. Irvine.
  7. ^ "Rev. Peterson, Founder and President of Bond Action, Calls on RNC Chair Michael Steele to Resign". Retrieved January 25, 2010.
  8. ^ "WorldNetDaily's Peterson unleashes nutty rant: Obama is 'destroying America based on lies".
  9. ^ "Jesse Lee Peterson on Slavery".
  10. ^ "Exploring Your Destiny w/ Rev. Jesse Lee Peterson: How women are building a shameless society".
  11. ^ http://jezebel.com/5909052/giving-women-the-vote-was-a-huge-mistake-says-fox-news-dude
  12. ^ Press release: Jesse Jackson to Face Civil Trial on January 17 for Assault and Civil Rights Violations(archive), Judicial Watch, Jan 13, 2006
  13. ^ Jesse Lee Peterson v. Jesse Jackson, et. al., Judicial Watch
  14. ^ Judicial Watch Statement on Verdict in Jesse Jackson Civil Rights Trial(archive), Judicial Watch, Jan 27, 2006
  15. ^ Choose Black America
  16. ^ [2]
  17. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions". Accuracy in Media. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  18. ^ WorldNetDaily. Jesse Peterson.

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