Al Sharpton Sits Next To Garner’s Widow and It’s His Worst Nightmare

Busybody

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Not only does Mrs. Garner say that her husband’s death wasn’t a racial thing, she says her husband was basically lazy and didn’t want to work, preferring to sell illegal cigarettes.

Sharpton keeps looking back at Chuck Todd with an expression that screams “are you going to tackle her or am I?”

Read more at http://iotwreport.com/?p=265252#aOW8fLwgMk2jf5Rz.99
 
While many in the streets of Ferguson and across the nation are beating the race-baiting drums after the decisions to not indict the police officers in the Michael Brown and Eric Garner cases, Garner’s wife, Esaw, appeared on Meet the Press with host Chuck Todd and Al Sharpton to speak her mind about her husband’s death.

After Todd opened by saying that her husband’s death has become “the face of bias” for the police force, Mrs. Garner countered by saying that she doesn’t believe race had anything to do with his death. She, like her daughter, Erica Garner, chose not to buy into the racial fire that some are trying to stoke.


“I feel that he was murdered unjustly,” Mrs. Garner said. “I don’t even feel like it’s a black and white thing, honestly. You know, in my opinion. I really don’t feel like it’s a black and white thing.”

“I feel like it’s just something that he continued to do, and the police knew, you know. They knew. It wasn’t like it was a shock – they knew. You know, they knew him by name.”

Read more at http://www.westernjournalism.com/wi...ting-next-to-al-sharpton/#vIgAqV6rvUCy26xu.99
 
While many in the streets of Ferguson and across the nation are beating the race-baiting drums after the decisions to not indict the police officers in the Michael Brown and Eric Garner cases, Garner’s wife, Esaw, appeared on Meet the Press with host Chuck Todd and Al Sharpton to speak her mind about her husband’s death.

After Todd opened by saying that her husband’s death has become “the face of bias” for the police force, Mrs. Garner countered by saying that she doesn’t believe race had anything to do with his death. She, like her daughter, Erica Garner, chose not to buy into the racial fire that some are trying to stoke.


“I feel that he was murdered unjustly,” Mrs. Garner said. “I don’t even feel like it’s a black and white thing, honestly. You know, in my opinion. I really don’t feel like it’s a black and white thing.”

“I feel like it’s just something that he continued to do, and the police knew, you know. They knew. It wasn’t like it was a shock – they knew. You know, they knew him by name.”

Read more at http://www.westernjournalism.com/wi...ting-next-to-al-sharpton/#vIgAqV6rvUCy26xu.99

Good read, Sammy.

I usta have a client named Greg who was a drug addicted, violent mama's boy who made plenty of babies with retarded girls from the treatment center they attended. He made so many babies I wished he'd die. And he did. From a drug overdose. It was wonderful. Cops get that way after a while.

People like Eric and Greg shouldn't wear out their welcomes.
 
Not only does Mrs. Garner say that her husband’s death wasn’t a racial thing, she says her husband was basically lazy and didn’t want to work, preferring to sell illegal cigarettes.

Sharpton keeps looking back at Chuck Todd with an expression that screams “are you going to tackle her or am I?”

Read more at http://iotwreport.com/?p=265252#aOW8fLwgMk2jf5Rz.99

While many in the streets of Ferguson and across the nation are beating the race-baiting drums after the decisions to not indict the police officers in the Michael Brown and Eric Garner cases, Garner’s wife, Esaw, appeared on Meet the Press with host Chuck Todd and Al Sharpton to speak her mind about her husband’s death.

After Todd opened by saying that her husband’s death has become “the face of bias” for the police force, Mrs. Garner countered by saying that she doesn’t believe race had anything to do with his death. She, like her daughter, Erica Garner, chose not to buy into the racial fire that some are trying to stoke.


I feel that he was murdered unjustly,” Mrs. Garner said. “I don’t even feel like it’s a black and white thing, honestly. You know, in my opinion. I really don’t feel like it’s a black and white thing.”

“I feel like it’s just something that he continued to do, and the police knew, you know. They knew. It wasn’t like it was a shock – they knew. You know, they knew him by name.”

Read more at http://www.westernjournalism.com/wi...ting-next-to-al-sharpton/#vIgAqV6rvUCy26xu.99

Nice to see you not tear the woman apart, bb...

...reminds me instantly of another LIT self-proclaimed hero who enjoyed patting himself on the back for resisting the urge to jack a Mexican at an ATM.

Kudos. :rolleyes:

But...

...what about the, “I feel that he was murdered unjustly” part?
 
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