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The naive and racially charged warm takes from the ABC’s The View cast were unavoidable after the passing of former football player and criminal O. J. Simpson. Of sure, it was staunchly , racist , and , anti- Semitic , co- number, Sunny Hostin , ( the , son of slaves owners ) who dredged up the false cultural aspects of the case applied by competition- hustlers. She also argued that Simpson’s conviction was great since, collectively, officers have killed more people than he did.
In the terrible killings of Nicole Brown and Ron Goldman, Hostin claimed that the event was more about” the program and how the program treated African Americans and continues to treat African Americans in this country” than “his guilt or innocence.”
Despite the circumstances never being related in the slightest, Hostin insisted that a whole” environment” recounting of Simpson’s prosecution may include what happened to Rodney King decades earlier. You must remember that in 1992, the soldiers who beat Rodney King nearly to death in front of the country’s eyes were acquitted in that context. This happened in 1994″, she said.
Hostin argued that the Simpson test was more about using it as a stand-in for race relations in America for the dark society, which she identified with. She went on to say that Simpson may include “got away with it,” but that “police officials have killed several more people than O. J. Simpson.”
Ana Navarro, a phony traditional, recalls following the case as a law student and recalling:” It was the first time in my life I was confronted with the cultural divides and the unpleasant cultural gaps in America.”
Navarro said she spoke with former CNN host Don Lemon about Simpson’s death and trial, and he seemed to concur with Hostin’s get. ” And I do think, Don Lemon was saying to me yesterday, it was not about guilt or innocence, it was about competition. It was so much about contest”, she recounted.
Sara Haines, the conversation’s co-host, refocused the topic to Simpson’s two victims, injecting a little sobriety into the debate:
HAINES: I want to take a moment and say that there were some honest individuals involved in this. Ronald Goldman and Nicole Brown were viciously murdered and killed. And I believe Nicole has been repeatedly let down by the legal method. She had 911 nine days, had her body rubbed, had blood in the trees, and had always released her domestic offender.
Diamond: Who was O. J.
HAINES: Yeah. Because I believe Nicole Brown and Ronald Goldman are the persons we need to be focusing on more than just being subjects, I just want to stop saying his name like everyone else is. She had children. She was a favorite woman who missed out on a lot of her career. The Goldman household also longs for their child who was interesting, form, and cheerful.
” My brain continues to go out for those people who lived beyond and without their loved ones for whatever went on in the muck of this,” she said.
The solitude from Hostin was deafening.
The text is above. Visit “expand” to learn:
ABC’s The Watch
April 12, 2024
11: 03: 00 a. m. Eastern(…)
SUNNY HOSTIN: You see, I believe it was more about the program and how it treated African American in this country, and how it treated them.
You need to remember that in 1992, the soldiers who beat Rodney King nearly to suicide in front of the world’s vision were cleared of all charges. This happened in 1994. And I think for the black area, it was less about whether or not O. J. did it, because I think even now you’ll get to, you know, barber shops and beauty salons and people will say “he did it”, but he got away with it and the police officers, you know, police officers have killed several more people than O. J. Simpson.
JOY BEHAR: I believe they did n’t trust the police because they did n’t plant any evidence because–
HOSTIN: Well, Mark Furman said on the testimony walk,” I never used a racial slur”.
By the way, individuals, when a prosecutor in combination- examination in a courtroom says, “have you actually done this”? they are aware of your actions.
[Laughter]
Right? And so then they come up with tapes and he’s using the” N” word like Christmas.
BEHAR: Do you not believe that some of the reasons he was able to escape were attributable to his fame rather than simply that he was black?
ANA NAVARRO: There were so many reasons. The prosecution had a lot of failures. And, yes, I think part of the reason that it’s so fascinating. Look, it’s fascinating because it was O. J. Simpson. He was a celebrity, he was rich, he was a successful athlete, we all knew who he was, and he was in car rental company commercials. However, there are times in American history when people can remember where they were when the verdict was read.
HOSTIN: And when the Bronco chase was happening.
NAVARRO: Everything.
BEHAR: Well, it was covered extensively.
NAVARRO: Like with 9/11, with the JFK death, with Challenger explosion.
HOSTIN: Michael Jackson’s death.
NAVARRO: It reaches that level because I think it’s had such cultural significance. It launched so many careers. It altered the way we handle legal matters.
HOSTIN: Camera were in the courtroom.
NAVARRO: For me, this was my first time, and I realize how naive it may sound to some people, but I was raised in Miami. I attended a Catholic school with 98 percent Latina immigrant girls in it. For the first time in my life have I been confronted with the painful racial gaps and racial divides in America.
And I can recall watching it. I can recall that when I was a student union in law school, both the black and the non-black students were on the sidelines. Everyone else was with jaws agape as the black students erupted into cheers, and it’s something that still is happening in so many cases.
And I do think, Don Lemon was saying to me yesterday, it was not about guilt or innocence, it was about race. There was a lot of race here.
SARA HAINES: I want to take a moment and say that there were some honest individuals involved in this. Ronald Goldman and Nicole Brown were viciously murdered and killed. And I believe Nicole has been repeatedly let down by the legal method. She had 911 nine days, had her body rubbed, had blood in the trees, and had always released her domestic offender.
Diamond: Who was O. J.
HAINES: Yeah. Because I believe Nicole Brown and Ronald Goldman are the persons we need to be focusing on more than just being subjects, I just want to stop saying his name like everyone else is. She had children. She was a favorite woman who missed out on a lot of her career. The Goldman household also longs for their child who was interesting, form, and cheerful.
BEHAR: He was really an innocent bystander.
HAINES: They both were innocent.
BEHAR: She was not a bystander, but –
HAINES: For whatever occurred in this mess, I still feel for the families who lived apart from and without their loved ones.
(…)