Ralph Nader Radio Hour

“I Am Somebody!”

Feb 28, 2026
Michelle Singletary, Washington Post personal finance columnist who writes The Color of Money, recalls how Jesse Jackson’s “I am somebody” moment shaped her career and views on DEI. Eric S. Fish, UC Davis law professor and former public defender, explains grand juries pushing back on weak prosecutions and suggests procedural reforms. They also touch on State of the Union reactions and consumer finance pitfalls.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
ANECDOTE

How Jesse Jackson Made Michelle Believe In Herself

  • Michelle Singletary recounts hearing Jesse Jackson's "I Am Somebody" speech in fifth grade and how repeating it boosted her confidence and belief she could go to college.
  • She describes living with her grandmother, feeling unwanted, then shouting "I am somebody" and feeling herself grow larger and capable of pursuing writing and scholarships.
INSIGHT

DEI As Leveling The Playing Field

  • Michelle explains DEI isn't charity but a remedy for an uneven playing field that builds stronger teams with varied skills and perspectives.
  • She likens a workplace to a football team needing quarterbacks, running backs, linebackers, and kickers to win.
INSIGHT

How Grand Juries Became Prosecutor Controlled

  • Eric S. Fish traces grand juries from powerful local democratic institutions to modern deference where prosecutors alone present evidence and proceedings are secret.
  • He notes grand juries today usually lack defense presence, judges, transcripts, and commonly rubber-stamp prosecutions.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app