amy: that is angela davis speaking about bernadine. bernadine, i want to go to you next.wanted list. he replaced her on that list. i want to go back to that time. this was the fbi time of j edgar hoover. for those not familiar with this history, talk about how you got involved, and that how you got involved with the weather underground, became the leader of weather underground. bernadine: it is astonishing, what can i say, there is no such thing as replacing angela davis on any list, anything. she is a comrade, colleagues, sister, and friend. her pointing out that we didn't have the language in 1969, 19 70's, not just about language, but the connective tissue of the word intersectionality, so you didn't have to choose between being a woman and being against the war in vietnam, that was insane, but the politics often made that true on the ground. her whole life, her whole career making that manifest form black lives matter, the activists of today, it is quite dramatic. you can see their wisdom, their ability to fight for unity, at the same time as they have disagreements a