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Bill O'Reilly Delivers Another Fiery, Race-Themed 'Talking Points' Segment (Al Sharpton Is Not Going to Be Happy)
(Fox News)

Bill O'Reilly Delivers Another Fiery, Race-Themed 'Talking Points' Segment (Al Sharpton Is Not Going to Be Happy)

"That's right, Al Sharpton is in business with people who put out entertainment harmful to children."

Fresh off his Monday "Talking Points Memo" that sparked a heated debate about race and the problems harming the black community, Bill O'Reilly teed off again Thursday, slamming the "civil rights industry" for not addressing the core reasons why many blacks are not succeeding in the "market place." Due to that fact, young blacks continue to be "at risk" and are faced with "enormous obstacles to overcome."

(Fox News)

However, O'Reilly started his "Talking Points Memo" with a scathing critique of rapper Lil Wayne and one of his "piece of garbage" songs in which he brags that he beats "that p***y up like Emmett Till." Till was savagely murdered in Mississippi at the age of 14 for flirting with a white girl in 1955.

The Till family was outraged by the disgusting lyrics – and rightfully so. Mountain Dew was also unhappy about the offensive song and pulled a multimillion dollar endorsement deal with the rapper.

It wasn't long before none other than Al Sharpton and his group, National Action Network, intervened in the dispute between Mountain Dew, Lil Wayne and the Till family, O'Reilly explained.

"National Action Network doesn't want the end result to be the penalization of artists - Although they clearly need to be corrected…" Sharpton said in a May 8 statement.

Then O'Reilly delivered the "shocker": The parent company of Lil Wayne's Cash Money Content, "which markets vile stuff that hurts children," is a partner in distributing Sharpton's upcoming book. It would later be revealed that it wasn't until after his intervention that his publisher penned the distribution deal with the rapper's parent company.

"That's right, Al Sharpton is in business with people who put out entertainment harmful to children," O'Reilly said.

Though Sharpton's spokesperson claims he didn't pen the deal with Cash Money Content, O'Reilly called the excuse "bogus" because as an author he knows every author gets a say in who he or she does business with.

"The civil rights industry is not addressing the core reason why many African-Americans are not succeeding in the market place," he added. "Because of that, young blacks continue to be at risk and have enormous obstacles to overcome."

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O'Reilly was later joined by Paul Porter, a former executive at Black Entertainment Television and current Parents Television Council advisory board member.

Reacting to the TV host's scathing rebuke of Sharpton and Lil Wayne, Porter said he was "spot on" and "got it right."

Porter agreed that the loudest voices within the "civil rights industry" tend to ignore artists like Lil Wayne, while a "silent majority" remains outraged.

He went on to say that Sharpton got involved in the Mountain Dew, Lil Wayne dispute because it was "good press" and he figured he could do something to smooth out the relationship. "There's also money exchanged," he added.

A little more than a month after intervening in the dispute, Porter explained, Sharpton got the distribution deal from Lil Wayne's parent company. O'Reilly was sure to get that much "on the record."

 

(H/T: The-Monk)

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