Her

Age 29
Seen 3 Hours Ago
Posted 1 Week Ago


Jon Stewart was not in the mood for political jokes or humor on Thursday’s “Daily Show.” The outgoing host, in addressing Wednesday’s deadly shooting in Charleston, South Carolina that left 9 people dead, including state senator Clementa Pinckney, said he felt nothing but “sadness” for the victims, and the racism that African Americans continue to endure in the United States.

“This is a terrorist attack,” he said. “Al Qaeda, ISIS, they’re not sh-t compared to the damage we can do to ourselves on a regular basis.”

“What blows my mind is the disparity of response,” Stewart added, visibly frustrated. “When we think people that are foreign are going to kill us and us killing ourselves…We invaded two countries and spent trillions of dollars and (lost) thousands of American lives and now fly unmanned death machines over like five or six different counties, all to keep Americans safe. We’ve got to do whatever we can—we’ll torture people. We’ve got to do whatever we can to keep Americans safe. (But) nine people shot in a church, ‘Hey, what are you going go to do?’…that’s the part I cannot for the life of me wrap my head around.”

“I hate to use a pun but this one is black and white,” he said to applause.

There's a couple of aspects of his monologue that I don't agree with (an example being '...ISIS and al Queda aren't muk compared to what we [Americans] can do to ourselves [other Americans]') but I think that comes down to his delivery rather than actual differences of opinion.

At the very least, Stewart has provided an alternate viewpoint that we should all consider, particularly as the killer (I do not believe in spreading the name or face of him as giving him presence only strengthens him) fits what many people tend to say defines an act of terrorism: a violent act intended to further a political, religious or ideological belief through terror. In this case, he wanted to start a civil war.

What do you think? What can you say about this godawful situation?

And of course, rest in power to all of those who were murdered.