The theme of Beck’s segment seemed to be “faith, hope, and charity”– the cornerstones of the 9/12 movement, and his mission to get Sharpton to agree that all of those values, however one defines them, is they key to restoring America. Sharpton was polite enough not to challenge the claim that America needed restoring, but found his hands tied when he tried to make any non-philosophical argument. When noting that he believed “some need more charity than others,” Beck was quick to return to the central theme that charity was, indeed, a positive value. To say
Peace and harmony with the most controversial figures of the left is not exactly what people tune into Beck to hear, but it’s precisely the kind of behavior that defies shallow claims on the left that Beck is a madman, a showman, and a partisan stooge. Glenn Beck the Media Matters villain isn’t supposed to be capable of polite conversation with Al Sharpton, though credit where credit is due: Al Sharpton the RedState villain isn’t supposed to be anywhere near Glenn Beck, either.
Watch Beck and Sharpton talk about faith, hope, and charity below: