comparemela.com

0 basically moral barbarians, anilists. the idea of driving along in a car as though you're shooting a tin can shooting a young man in the back and killing him, taking away 60 years of his life. it is appalling. and i think it's reflective i think of something deeply wrong in society. >> a professor out in california, usc, referred to them as evil. and she did that with the assumption they're guilty. i make that assumption like-wise even though they haven't had trial. but the whole idea that's a thrill to kill someone, just to sort of destroy someone. >> it's not only evil, there's a sense here of amorality. no sense that anything of real preciousness and value is involved. it's let's get our kicks for a couple of minutes by shooting a man to death. and i think it raises a question, what do these kids come out? where do they come from to get the idea that this was sort of a fine thing, a good thing to do and a lot of fun? i think if you take a look at the culture, i think we got to take a look at the culture that they grew up in. look at the -- kids when i grew up, you never heard of anything like this. kid got in fights and there were problems and things like that. but i think what's happened to the society is that the conscience-forming institutions, the family, that's disintegrated and collapsed. you've got the school which is not doing the job it used to. the black churches and many of the white churches are -- the country's been dechristianized. and these kids have clearly been desensitized. i think what you've got here are products of the cultural social moral revolution that overthrew all the standards by which previous generations lived. i grew up in d.c., greta. i was born in the 30s and grew up in the 50s. my father grew up here in the 20s. they had black communities here, and hundreds of thousands of extraordinarily poor people, working class people. you didn't have things like this going on. >> you talk about being desensitized. i know for myself, i can walk out of a movie and someone says was it violent? and i had to stop and think for a second. years ago if something was violent i walked out, knew it right away. you become so accustomed to violence even on television you have to stop and think was it violent? it was horrible. >> what are these kids getting from the culture? radio they get hiphop and rap. this one kid on his twitter feed or whatever it is, he's talking about gangs and colors of gangs. what do they get out of hollywood? movies that are pornographic. i watch a lot of tv and cable. some of these shows are triple x. they would never be on before. this one kid puts out he's interested in sex and violence. and the movies are extraordinarily violent. you get guys being shot, almost like cartoon characters being killed. and so where are these kids going to find something which says, no, that is wrong. you can't do that, and you shouldn't do something like that? where is the voice that says no? >> you talk about the voice. the driver was white. >> yeah. >> passenger was black. the driver is facing at least tonight lesser charges which are unclear to me why he didn't get the same charge. but i'll wait to see that one. i would have expected all of them to have murder one all in the car. so that's a bit curious to me. but president obama spoke out about the trayvon martin, also a shooting that hit a real nerve in this country for good reasons. and should he speak out on this one? >> he sure should. trayvon martin was a tragedy, but you had two people mixed up, horrible fight. one was winning, one was panicked, screaming, yelling, shot a gun. that is different than driving along in a car and saying let's kill this guy and murdering him. now, my guess what is going to come out of this, quite frankly, is that it is racial. why would you pick a 22-year-old white male if you're just shooting anybody? >> so you have a white person -- does that change the dynamics of the discussion? >> we're going to find that out. but i will say this. what's the most common form of interracial hate crime is black on white. greta, when i did a book one of my recent books i went down to the fbi statistics because the post doesn't do it. more than one year, 2007, 433,000 attacks by black on whites. one eighth of that by whites on black. at the same time, the black community was five times as small -- i mean one fifth the size of white community. add it up. the idea of racial hate crimes is 40 times more prevalent in the black community than the white community. and nobody talks about it. >> we could also join -- we could sort of bypass this whole race issue whether trayvon martin or balance ondowns people, also join together and have a voice and be as outraged regardless of who the victim is, or regardless of who gets shot or who gets arrested. i really am watching. everybody else says where's reverend sharpton? get up there and start talking about violence among young people now. >> i think we ought to talk about crime in general. innocent victims of crime and people who died and shouldn't have, trayvon martin. but also innocent victims of crime. but we ought to talk -- we're going to have to talk about this aspect of it, which sharpton leaps on all the time, the one rape when interracial rape is almost exclusively black on white? why did he jump on that? for racial reasons. i think the president of the united states, particularly since this fellow's from australia and he's over here, he ought to get up and say, look, we got a terrible problem in this country. and we are sorry. and the truth is, chris lane, he looks like a lot of people's sons himself. and that's what a lot of white folks -- white males would look like 30 years ago. well, he addressed this the same way he got up with trayvon martin? it's a test. >> 30 seconds. to give a little time to give parity i did some mathematics. president obama first spoke about trayvon martin 26 days between the encounter between trayvon martin and george zimmerman. does he have a few days so we shouldn't ask him now where are you? >> i think the president's got several days. the reason he didn't speak out for 26 days is that whole thing didn't percolate and grow for a couple of weeks, what happened down there in florida. >> this is bad on day one. that makes it even worse to me in the sense of if we have to wait for people to get really upset and before our leader should speak, this is what's upsetting from the get-go trayvon martin was upsetting and george zimmerman and this one from the get go. >> why is it upsetting? people are killed every day. >> it's violence -- >> greta, how many young people were killed the same day chris lane was? several dozen i would guess. however many. but the reason this has captured the imagination is the anilism of it. the thrill kill or boredom of it. the fact that it is interracial. the fact that this is a nice kid. he's playing ball. he's at the peak of his life and he's shot down like that. and these guys are laughing and tweeting about it? it's all the circumstances that surround it. that is what's going to bring it into the white house press room pronto. >> i think because the president spoke out about other ones he needs to speak out about this one. plus the fact it involves australia and how the world looks at us. because this one is echoing around the world. but i'm going to take the last word on that at least for now. thank you, pat. new information tonight in the irs scandal. a top deputy just got a letter, one she probably did not want. the house oversight committee sending lois learner's aide asking her about inconsistencies in her testimony about the scandal. jim jordan joins us. good evening, sir. >> good to be with you, greta. >> so you sent a letter off to hally paz. what do you want from her? >> it looks like she lied to the committee. and we're giving her a chance to set the record straight. and i guess -- i think it's important to remember who hally paz is. losi lerner's chief deputy. she gave 2,000 to president obama's election campaign. she was the very first interview we did when this story broke three months ago. very first interview we did. it looks like she didn't give us the truth. and so now we want to have her come in and say, hey, give us the right answers. give us the truth or you'll be back in front of the committee answering our questions. >> two types of inconsistencies. there are the immaterial ones, the little ones that don't really make a difference, and then there are the material ones, especially material ones that are under oath which are even more important. i take it her testimony was under oath? is that right? >> yeah. sure was. and remember, she's the first interview we did. greta, the first interview we did. go ahead. >> let me ask you. what are you saying she was inconsistent about so we can determine whether or not -- so we can discuss whether it's material or not? what's the most egregious inconsistency? >> she told us that tea party was just a generic term, didn't really apply to tea party conservative groups but applied to any group seeking tax-exempt status that had any kind of political affiliation. subsequent witnesses we've interviewed and evidence we've seen written e-mails totally dispute what she claims. and the reason i say she was the first interview why that's important, remember this was still when the white house was pushing this narrative. oh, it's just a couple of rogue really targeting conservative groups, she was the person that got on the plane to washington, flew to cincinnati and tried to clean up this mess and tried to be the fixer of this situation. so all that leads us to -- why were you saying these things? we want to get to the truth. >> i do not think it's insignificant, sir, that a private organization has now gone to court on a freedom of information act because the irs will not turn over certain documents about how they train to do these exemption for the t tax-exempt groups. the irs works for us. why won't they surrender this information? why won't they give the documents? >> well, i'm as frustrated as you. as frustrated as the american people. frankly, greta, we are now stepping it up. we have sedan any warfol we're going send subpoenas to jack lew, the head of the treasury department, secretary of the treasury. we're going straight to him. give us the documents. give us the information. we've been on your show and talked about the fact we don't even have all of lois lerner's e-mails yet. the lady at the center of the storm, who broke the story, took the fifth, still being paid by the taxpayers. we've got to rachet this up a notch and send the subpoenas to jack lew at treasury and ask him to get us the information we should have had months ago. >> we thank you, sir. >> thank you, greta. the nation's talking about the cruel thrill kill in oklahoma. three teens accused in the murder of a college baseball player from australia. so what do you think? should president obama make a statement about the oklahoma fatal shooting as he did in the trayvon martin case or should he stay out of it? go to gretawire.com and vote in that poll right now. straight ahead, last night you heard this from a louisiana state senator. >> liberalism has nearly destroyed black america. and now it's time for black america to return. >> up next, elbert guillory is here to tell you why he stands by that. and yes, the jobless rate did dip down in july. don't be fooled by that. we are right now in a real job crisis for many of americans, maybe even for you. you'll hear from representative michele bachmann and our panel of job seekers coming up. if you are having a drink right now, as you watch "on the record" we have a story you cannot miss. stay tuned. you're going to thank us tomorrow. every day we're working to be an even better company - and to keep our commitments. and we've made a big commitment to america. bp supports nearly 250,000 jobs here. through all of our energy operations, we invest more in the u.s. than any other place in the world. in fact, we've invested over $55 billion here in the last five years - maour commitment has lanever been stronger. and you know what i walked out with? [ slurps ] [ dad ] a new passat. [ dad ] 0% apr. 60 months. done and done. [ dad ] in that driveway, is a german-engineered piece of awesome. that i got for 0% apr. good one, dad. thank you, dalton. [ male announcer ] it's the car you won't stop talking about. ever. hurry in to the volkswagen best. thing. ever.vent. and get 0% apr for 60 months, now until september 3rd. that's the power of german engineering. i put in the hours and built a strong reputation in the industry. i set goals and worked hard to meet them. i've made my success happen. so when it comes to my investments, i'm supposed to just hand it over to a broker and back away? that's not gonna happen. avo: when you work with a schwab financial consultant, you'll get the guidance you need with the control you want. talk to us today. like carpools... polly wants to know if we can pick her up. yeah, we can make room. yeah. [ male announcer ] ...office space. yes, we're loving this communal seating. it's great. [ male announcer ] the best thing to share? a data plan. at&t mobile share for business. one bucket of data for everyone on the plan, unlimited talk and text on smart phones. now, everyone's in the spirit of sharing. hey, can i borrow your boat this weekend? no. [ male announcer ] share more. save more. at&t mobile share for business. ♪

Related Keywords

Miami ,Florida ,United States ,Louisiana ,Australia ,Germany ,California ,East Central University ,Oklahoma ,San Diego ,Georgia ,Syria ,Oregon ,Oklahoma City ,Washington ,District Of Columbia ,Cincinnati ,Ohio ,Reunion ,Egypt ,Massachusetts ,Hollywood ,Maryland ,Americans ,Australian ,America ,German ,Syrian ,American ,Hannah Anderson ,George Zimmerman ,James Hoffa ,Trayvon Martin ,James Lee Dimaggio ,Elbert Guillory ,Lebron James ,Christina Anderson ,Holly Paz ,Michael Jones ,Jack Lew ,Dodd Frank ,Michele Bachmann ,Lois Lerner ,Reagan Pat Buchanan ,Barack Obama ,Mike Riley ,Bret Baier ,James Dimaggio ,Stouffer Mac ,Brett Anderson ,Greta Van Susteren ,Brett Anderson Hannah ,Joe Dimaggio ,Laura Robinson Dimaggio ,Isaac Newton ,Christine Eaton ,Ethan Anderson ,

© 2025 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.