and that s not even the subject. sort of how do we get to a point where we can have a conversation without the president? about what happened there and how we can not have it s wrong for so many reasons. and it s terrifying to everyone. so this is the point. the president made it the conversation. we could be on air talking about the protesters. true, about infrastructure, sanks. a lot of other things. how do we fix it? want to talk about moving the country forward. listening to one another f we want to truly unite our country, it s not i have my point of view and i m right and you re wrong. we need to listen. this president must, and i called the white house on monday after i saw what happened on saturday, the statement put out, i called them, i said, look, that isn t sufficient. the president needs to get in front of the cameras and he needs to establish a dialogue on race. there s obviously, people that
liberals, democratic policies that keep our kids dumb, uneducated, unemployed. we re in 2017, talk about a free enterprise system with the best talent in the country being bided on. that may be looked at as racism. the the idea that we have allowed the socialists to determine everything in the race, something you have to be careful about. this is all about at the end of the day, dividing us. at this point, espn should not have been apologizing, at the end of the day it was very, very not offensive to me to say the least. martha: jack what do you say to that? i m a conservative first. put that out there. in the center. but to say that slavery doesn t have an effect today is being out of touch. out of touch with the community. i m a 38-year-old man. both of my parents went to segregated schools. i mean, to say that we are not
feeling the effects of slavery, we have one population of people that aren t immigrants. we re descended from slaves. that same population are the most uneducated. not just because of policies, it s because we have parents and grandparents and great grandparents may not have the same type of education. it s just, that comment to me is ridiculous. martha: since you brought it up we need to learn a little bit about our history. a lot of 350e7 many don t realize 50 years after slavery we were the first race, first national network, business network. 60 years later first to have the first female black millionaire. fastest growing middle class. what does that have to do do with our lower class what does that have to do with our lower class people? the majority of african-americans aren t even in middle class, come on. black middle class, in the
some one else s heart. let me bring giono here. the words that the president said you felt, he said that he obviously was very against neonazis, against this movement, this white nationalist movement and that he grieved for the loss of this young woman in the middle of all that violence. what in it, and what about what happened yesterday, wasn t enough for you? what do you believe, you re making a judgment, i think, about what s in the president s heart on this. and you ve taken it to heart. well, i disagree with that in terms of i m making a judgment what s in the president s heart. for me it was the tone, ten or, and the content of what he said. he knew talking about race was a very sensitive issue. to many in the country. whether they be people of color, jewish, or anything else. there s a lot of americans that were fearful when they watch what happened on saturday.