Hill argued that Steele is wrong “all over the place.” Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson aren’t outraged that a black person was killed by a non-black person, he said, but because there hasn’t yet been justice. That the shooter was allowed to go home. “The whole case was a mess, and that’s what people are outraged about, the lack of justice,” Hill said.
Furthermore, Hill said just because black-on-black violence is an important issue, that doesn’t mean we can’t talk about “injustice coming from the criminal justice system” in the Martin case.
“But you don’t see the same amount of intensity in the shootings of children […] You don&
It would be “unusual,” he said, if they showed the same amount of intensity had Zimmerman also been black. Hill replied, “You know why it would be unusual? Because when black people are accused of shooting people, they get arrested. They get charged. They don’t get to home and watch Seinfeld that night.”
Hill added that in his experience with Sharpton and Jackson, he’s seen that they do talk about responsibility. But right now, he said, “There is a dead kid whose family isn’t getting justice and has nothing to do with black-on-black violence.”
O’Reilly asked whether justice meant convicting Zimmerman, but Hill said he simply meant a thorough investigation. O’Reilly argued, “That’s what they’re doing, doctor. That’s what they’re doing.” Hill agreed, but said it’s the result of the pressure from the public and media.
The pair further argued over demographics of violence, particularly in Chicago. “I don’t know anyone who doesn’t fear killers irrespective of what race they are,” Hill said. Contrary to
That, Hill said, is why they’re fighting for justice in the Trayvon case — because “all life is valuable.”
Take a look, via Fox News: