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TRANSCRIPT: Bill Bennett Interview on Hannity & Colmes Regarding Race/Crime (Colmes shamed)
BennettMornings.com ^ | 9-30-05

Posted on 09/30/2005 8:33:59 AM PDT by cgk

Bill Bennett Interview on Fox News' Hannity & Colmes Regarding Race, Crime, Etc.
Courtesy of Fox News Channel/9-29-2005

First, our top story tonight is the controversy surrounding radio talk show host Bill Bennett. Yesterday on his radio show, Mr. Bennett -- Dr. Bennett was quoted as saying. I do know that it's true that if you wanted to reduce crime, you could, if that were your sole purpose, you cold abort every black baby in this country and your crime rate would go down...that would be an impossible, ridiculous and morally reprehensible thing to do, but your crime rate would go down. So these far-out, these far-reaching, extensive extrapolations are, I think, tricky.



The comments have drawn criticism today from Senate minority leader Harry Reid who said he was appalled. Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy who called them racist and from House minority leader Nancy Pelosi who said they were shameful. Bill Bennett joins us now in an exclusive interview to talk about these comments.

Dr. Bennett, we appreciate you coming on tonight.

DR. BILL BENNETT, MORNING IN AMERICA HOST: Thank you.

COLMES: Might give you an opportune to put them in context and explain.

BENNETT: Sure. Well, the context was a radio show that I was doing yesterday, and the topic was abortion and we were talking about bad arguments in regard to abortion. A caller suggested he was opposed to abortion because he said if there were more babies there would be, eventually, more tax payers and a larger GNP, a smaller deficit. I said you want to be careful with that kind of argument because someone could postulate a situation where child's not likely to be a productive taxpayer. I said, arguments in which you take something that's far out, like the GNP and try to connect it up with abortion are tricky. I said make the case of abortion on the basis of life and protecting life. I said abortion is invoked in another way; you could make an argument that if you wanted to lower the crime rate, you saw the quote; you could practice abortion in very large numbers. You could do it in the black community; you could do it in other places. This is, by the way, the subject of a book for economics by a professor at Yale.

I said, however, if you were to practice that, widespread abortion in the black community or any other community, it would be ridiculous, impossible, and I appreciate you putting it on the screen, morally reprehensible. So I think morally reprehensible, when that is included in the quote makes it perfectly clear what my position is. A number of the people whom you have cited as condemning me have not made the inclusion of that remark, and so they make it seem, Alan, as if I am supporting such a monstrous idea, which of course I don't.

COLMES: Here's my concern. The root cause of crime, one would debate, it seems to be poverty. And from your remarks, I wonder if people might interpret it as saying the root cause of crime is race. And that debate about is it race is it poverty? What really is the root cause? And race affects people of all races and creeds and I think that's why...

BENNETT: Poverty. Poverty affects people of all races. Let me tell you what bothers me first, because I'm always candid with you. What bothers me is that last night on your radio show, you were all over me, Alan. And, you know, I was really surprised. You know me, you've known me for a long time and the fact that you would give credence to the notion that I would believe such a thing is very disturbing. I've had 1,000 opportunities when people have said to me what about that Alan Colmes, isn't he a jerk or a liberal this -- I've always said he's always a gentleman, he's nice to me. I run a radio show in which we don't yell at people, we don't make fun of them. We have liberals and conservatives and we deal with sensitive and important public policies issues and we do it in a responsible way. But people need to follow the argument and the argument I was making here is entirely plausible. The causes of crime are very complicated. But there is a very big literature, as you know, about single parenthood in crime, about race in crime, and about poverty in crime. And we've been talking about all these things lately in the context of New Orleans and other things.

COMES: Let me talk to you...

BENNETT: There are real things in the real world, and there are people who believe we should take such monstrous steps.

COLMES: Let me talk about what I said on my radio show.



BENNETT: I do not.

COLMES: Dr. Bennett -- Bill, because you know, I do consider you someone -- we've been good to each other. I like you. I think you respect me.

BENNETT: Yes sir.

COLMES: I was really shocked.

BENNETT: Have been.

COLMES: And I plaid what you said and the whole context of what you said. Frankly, I was just shocked by it. I don't believe you're a racist. I don't think that you believe those things. I was just shocked by what I heard and I -- basically there was a lot of callers calling up and commenting on it after I played your comments. And a lot of other people were shocked that you would have -- in the context you said it, say the things you said.

BENNETT: Well, you know, to put forward a hypothesis, a morally impossible hypothesis to show why it is morally impossible and reprehensible seems to me is a standard way of talking about public policy and a standard way of teaching. You know, I've taught philosophy for years and one argues in the hypothetical all the time. People have said such outrageous things, Alan, about race and this is not unknown to our history. It's certainly not unknown to our history -- to the history of Europe, recently. It's not unknown to the history of Islam. And what we have -- you've got to be able to make an argument and say look, you may be thinking you're going to achieve some good end, but you can't use a monstrous means to do it. You know, this is like a Swift's modest proposal for people who remember their literature. You put things up in order to examine them. I put it up, examined it, and said that is ridiculous and impossible no matter who advances that idea.

COLMES: All right, we got -- Sean will be with you in the next segment. There are some statistics, you know, that talk about how African- Americans are treated disparagingly in the criminal justice and, you know, we could debate whether or not there really is a greater prejudice against African-Americans and whether they are incarcerated disproportionately.

BENNETT: Yeah.

COLMES: But look we got to take a break and we'll continue with you...

BENNETT: Those are big complicated questions...

COLMES: And later, there more political fallout on Capitol Hill today over the indictment of Congressman Tom Delay. We'll take you behind closed doors to one of the most powerful members in the House.

And then Nation of Islam leader, Louis Farrakhan, says the suffering of hurricane Katrina has actually brought black Americans together. Is he using the crisis for his own political gain? You don't want to miss this.

And FEMA made a hasty deal in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and it's costing taxpayers $236 million. We'll get to the bottom of this shocking story coming up on HANNITY COLMES, tonight.

(NEWSBREAK) (COMMERCIAL BREAK) SEAN HANNITY, FOX NEWS ANCHOR: And this is a FOX News Alert. You are looking live at the hills of southern California where wildfires are blazing out of control and are threatening to destroy private residences. We have 3,000 firefighters working at this hour to control the blaze, but as you can see from these live pictures, they're still burning pretty hot. We're gong to keep you updated throughout the hour. We'll bring you new pictures as we get them and let you know as this developes. We hope they can put that out. I was out in southern California in Hope Ranch when this happened. It is devastating.

Also coming up tonight, now that Tom Delay is out House majority leader, at least temporarily, will issue like immigration reforms, spending on the federal level will suffer. We're going to ask one of the men who is stepping into part of his leadership position.

And there is some late-breaking information tonight about the man who is prosecuting come to Tom Delay. Is it a publicity stunt for a movie being made about him? We'll tell you about this tonight.

First, we continue with the host of Morning in America. Bill Bennett is back with us.

Bill, first of all, I have known for you many, many years. I know your faith, I know your character, I know who you are. You're a former secretary of education, former drug czar. This notion that Bill Bennett as is being alleged by prominent democrats has any racist bone in his body is appalling to me.

BENNETT: Yeah.

HANNITY: And I'm glad to hear you say what you said here. I want you to respond to those democrats that are grandstanding, the same ones that had Robert Bird, the former Klansman as their leader. The ones that didn't speak out about Congressman Wrangle's Bull Connor remark.

BENNETT: Yeah. Yeah. Well, let's see, you got Kennedy. I will -- I'll not take instruction from Teddy Kennedy. A young woman likely drowned because of his negligence. I'll take no moral instruction with him. That's much worse than legal gambling what Teddy Kennedy did. He should make no judgments at all about people. He shouldn't be in the Senate. As far as racist and all this other stuff, I'll put my record up with Howard Dean, with Harry Reid.

When I was drug czar, you bet, we were working on the issue of black crime, Alan and Sean, because there was a lot of crime in the black community. And you know who most of the victims are? Their black people. Yeah, black violence -- black-on-black violence is very serious. I went to about 120 inner city communities. That's where the senate wanted me to go, that's where the Senate wanted me to go, that's where I wanted to go. We went after public housing and we went after the bad guys. And you know what? We got the bad guys. And drug use went down. And we raised the price and lowered the purity of cocaine. And we arrested four of the most powerful drug dealers in the world. And got a lot of these guys off the street. And I am very proud of that. Because when we went into the inner city black community, the people said to me, Mr. Czar, or Czar, or Mr. Benet, you get those people off the street and protect us. And we did our best to do it.

Before that, when I was secretary of education, I took on what I think is one of the great civil rights issues of our time, which is educational opportunity and educational choice. The stupid ghettoized curriculum we have, the fact that these black kids go to lousy schools and aren't allowed to choose the schools of their choice because they don't have the money and don't have the opportunity.

I've been at this for 25 years and I have been called everything in the book, but I will stay at what I do because I believe it.

Let me just tell you, when it comes to abortion, my wife's program, best friends, has kept more young women from having abortions because they don't get pregnant because they take her good counsel...

HANNITY: Let me...

BENNETT: Than the entire black caucus. She has done more for inner city black girls than the entire black caucus. So I will not bow my head to any of these people. I will not give up the ground of compassion and sympathy. But I'll tell you, we have real issues and we have got to talk about them candidly. And if you don't think there are people who are making draconian proposals about abortion and this and that and the other thing, you know, you don't know the nature...

HANNITY: Let me ask you this. I want to ask you about the nature of debate in this society.

BENNETT: Sure.

HANNITY: I go back to the Bill Maher issue. I don't like -- I don't even like Bill Maher. We disagree on just about everything. But Bill Maher said one statement and his entire history of support in the military was cast aside and people focused on one thing. I said wait a minute, that's wrong. Here's Bill Bennett, here's Trent Lott. One statement, there's no room to apologize, explain, put into context, revise or extend one's remarks because people want to hop on it. We now see the democrats trying to do right now with you and trying to put you in a position of characterizing you, or categorizing you as something you are not. What does that tell you about debate and free speech in the country today?

BENNETT: It's bad. You know, if you could do an analysis -- it would be interesting to do an analysis. All day I've been reading reports and statements by people about me, Sean, and it's interesting, some use the whole quote and are fair, some don't. And that tells you something. But the problem, I think, on the liberal side, the democratic side is they attitudinize, they condemn but they don't have a program.

You know, the president -- I hope the president pays for this program in New Orleans, but he's got a program, and it's some interesting ideas about enterprise zones and school choice, and giving people opportunities, you know, with the loans and the green lining and they ought to be tried. Because these are ideas that might actually help the poor as opposed to maintaining the welfare state, which does not help poor people at all. It's destroyed a lot of families and it has created circumstances in which more poor people and more black people have had to suffer. What's lifted, the economic life and reduced crime in the black community has been hope and opportunity and education and enterprise.

HANNITY: Let me ask you one last question.

BENNETT: And that I think is much more, I have to tell you on this side of the aisle, I want to politicize this because there are good people on both sides.

HANNITY: Explain. I want you to explain, though, for people that see that one quote, that read that one quote, what do you say to them?

BENNETT: What I say to them, Sean, is if they were given the impression that I, you know, am in favor of such a horrible idea as, you know, my critics are suggesting, they need to look at the whole quote. I don't believe that. And I'm sorry that people have misrepresented my views so much that that has given folks that impression. You're right about a person's life. I've got a life, you know, take me in the totality of my actions and I'll tell you, I will stand with my record.



One must be very careful one gets into these arguments and we try to do it. But, you know, we try on this show to do serious and controversial issues. And it's a big country and it's a free country. We don't put liberals down. We don't put people down with whom we disagree. We talk about serious things in a serious way. And if you're not allowed to talk about these subjects, then it's not the country it's supposed to be.

You've got to be able to condemn these horrible ideas as I did.

HANNITY: Bill Bennett, appreciate you being on the program.

BENNETT: Thank you. Thank you guys.

HANNITY: Thank you very much.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bennett; billbennett; colmes; fnc; foxnews; hannity; roeeffect; transcript
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To: mad puppy

He was having a conversation and forgot that most people don't know the slightest things about conversation.


41 posted on 09/30/2005 12:16:15 PM PDT by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: All

WHITE HOUSE SWITCHBOARD: COMMENTS LINE

Comments: 202-456-1111

I just called in my comments and first said that I was a strong supporter of the President and our troops and their mission in Iraq, and to "stay the course".

Then I asked that the President and his staff take another look at Bennett's comments in full as I believed the White House was too hasty in making a judgment. .

The operator told me she believed Bennett's quote was "taken out of context" and she "heard that Soros' money is behind the attack on Bennett."

42 posted on 09/30/2005 12:40:55 PM PDT by cgk (Bennett: If we are surrounded by the trivial & vicious, it is all too easy to make our peace with it)
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To: cgk

Once everything is heard IN CONTEXT there is no choice but to defend Bennett.


43 posted on 09/30/2005 12:44:22 PM PDT by 1Old Pro
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To: cgk
I believe it. Moveon.org hit job.

Brainless slime never sleeps.
44 posted on 09/30/2005 12:48:16 PM PDT by TheForceOfOne (It was a village of idiots that raised Hillary to Senator status.)
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To: cgk

While I basically understand (from this transcript and what ever little else I've seen) Bennett's point, there's still something bothersome about it. Just a bit. But I agree w/Hannity: you can't libel/slander some1 based on 1 comment. And you certainly can't boot them out (a`la Lott).


I would like to see the ENTIRE exchange, before and after the "whole" quote given here.

Much better would be a tape of that entire exchange/dialogue. Words on a page don't tell everything either; 1 must HEAR the inflections, emphasis, etc.


45 posted on 09/30/2005 1:02:28 PM PDT by the OlLine Rebel (Common sense is an uncommon virtue.)
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To: the OlLine Rebel
The exchange is available on Bennett's website BennettMornings.com, but you have to be a subscriber to access it. I am sure it will turn up somewhere.

Here is Bennett's latest about this:

Statement By Bill Bennett, Sep. 30, 2005
From the Desk of William J. Bennett September 30, 2005

"On Wednesday, a caller to my radio show proposed the idea that one good argument for the pro-life position would be that if we didn't have abortions, Social Security would be solvent. I stated my doubts about such a thesis, as well as my opposition to such a form of argument (the audio of the call is available at my Website: bennettmornings.com).

"I then stated that such extrapolations of this argument can cut both ways, and cited the current bestseller, Freakonomics, which discusses the authors' thesis that abortion reduces crime.

"Then, putting my philosophy professor's hat on, I went on to reveal the limitations of such arguments by showing the absurdity in another such argument, along the same lines. I entertained what law school professors call 'the Socratic method' and what I would hope good social science professors still use in their seminars. In so doing, I suggested a hypothetical analogy while at the same time saying the proposition I was using about blacks and abortion was 'impossible, ridiculous, and morally reprehensible,' just to ensure those who would have any doubt about what they were hearing, or for those who tuned in to the middle of the conversation.

"The issues of crime and race have been on many people's minds, and tongues, for the past month or so--in light of the situation in New Orleans; and the issues of race, crime, and abortion are well aired and ventilated in articles, the academy, the think tank community, and public policy. Indeed the whole issue of crime and race is not new in social science, nor popular literature. One of the authors of Freakonomics, himself, had an extended exchange on the discussion of these issues on the Internet some years back--which was also much debated in the think tank community in Washington.

"A thought experiment about public policy, on national radio, should not have received the condemnations it has. Anyone paying attention to this debate should be offended by those who have selectively quoted me, distorted my meaning, and taken out of context the dialogue I engaged in this week. Such distortions from 'leaders' of organizations and parties is a disgrace not only to the organizations and institutions they serve, but to the First Amendment.

"In sum, let me reiterate what I had hoped my long career had already established: that I renounce all forms of bigotry--and that my record in trying to provide opportunities for, as well as save the lives of, minorities in this country stands up just fine."

46 posted on 09/30/2005 1:13:51 PM PDT by cgk (Bennett: If we are surrounded by the trivial & vicious, it is all too easy to make our peace with it)
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To: the OlLine Rebel; WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
Found it.

LISTEN TO THE ACTUAL RADIO SHOW CALL HERE:

Windows Media Player clip

47 posted on 09/30/2005 1:17:54 PM PDT by cgk (Bennett: If we are surrounded by the trivial & vicious, it is all too easy to make our peace with it)
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To: NormB

It's more like Pass Chris-chee-ann. It's not some anti Christian bias.


48 posted on 09/30/2005 1:24:13 PM PDT by petitfour
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To: injin

"anyone taken a look at the demographics of the US prison population lately?......"

Will do you one better. Let's look at which states have the highest crime rates, the highest welfare rates, the lowest edcuation scores and who they are governed by.

That will nail it.


49 posted on 09/30/2005 1:38:38 PM PDT by EQAndyBuzz (Liberal Talking Point - Bush = Hitler ... Republican Talking Point - Let the Liberals Talk)
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To: calljack

The whole notion of 'cause and effect' in human society is essentially meaningless.




How can that be true?

Are you saying that large scale social conditions have no root causes? I don't understand how you can dismiss underlying conditions (Causes) for the current state of affairs (the effect),regardless of good or bad.

Political corruption causes starvation in africa.
Cause and effect, No?

Medical and political incompetence and personel ignorance leads to widespread AIDS, also in africa
Cause and effect, No?

If there is no cause and effect, then why should I send my kids to school? A better education will not help them live better lives?




There are indeed a host of correlations between all sorts of social phenomena, but that does not mean that these relations are causal.

To attempt to reduce these connections to some reductive equation is to fall into the intellectual delusion of scientism.

Purposive human behavior is irreducible to any causal account. In the final analysis, we all do what we do because we choose to do it.


50 posted on 09/30/2005 1:40:01 PM PDT by headsonpikes (The Liberal Party of Canada are not b*stards - b*stards have mothers!)
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To: cgk

bttt


51 posted on 09/30/2005 1:42:43 PM PDT by petercooper (The Republican Party: We Suck Less.)
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To: headsonpikes

The whole notion of 'cause and effect' in human society is essentially meaningless.

Gobbledegook.

Purposive human behavior is irreducible to any causal account. In the final analysis, we all do what we do because we choose to do it.

To say that we all do what we want to because we want to, and ending your sentence there completly ignores WHY we do it. I do this action hoping for this response. Cause and effect.

There are indeed a host of correlations between all sorts of social phenomena, but that does not mean that these relations are causal.

We do lots of things, perhaps even EVERYTHING, because we believe that, in the end, we will benefit some way either financially, spiritually, or in some other way that floats our boat. We hope our actions will lead to a positive benifit. Cause leads to effect.

To attempt to reduce these connections to some reductive equation is to fall into the intellectual delusion of scientism.

I have no idea what this means.
I think maybe you read a lot.

You didn't answer my question,
Should I send my kids to school?
Either answer you gives will prove cause and effect,
won't it?


52 posted on 09/30/2005 2:23:17 PM PDT by calljack (Sometimes your worst nightmare is just a start.)
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To: calljack

You certainly are belligerant.

I guess my point would be that people have MOTIVES. Motives are not a species of causes.

Are those words short enough?


53 posted on 09/30/2005 3:09:14 PM PDT by headsonpikes (The Liberal Party of Canada are not b*stards - b*stards have mothers!)
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To: calljack

Oh, about school - I would advise sending your kids to school, you'll be arrested if you don't!


54 posted on 09/30/2005 3:11:49 PM PDT by headsonpikes (The Liberal Party of Canada are not b*stards - b*stards have mothers!)
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To: headsonpikes
I would advise sending your kids to school, you'll be arrested if you don't!

Where's that? I don't send mine to school, and nobody's arresting me. Homeschooling is legal (and often better).

55 posted on 09/30/2005 3:30:03 PM PDT by Graymatter
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To: Graymatter

I'm all for non-school education.


56 posted on 09/30/2005 4:08:38 PM PDT by headsonpikes (The Liberal Party of Canada are not b*stards - b*stards have mothers!)
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To: headsonpikes

You certainly are belligerent.


It was not my intention to be belligerent.
You don't have to get insulting.

BTW you misspelled belligerent.
Maybe all those fancy books you read to come up with all those fancy words that don't actually mean anything didn't include spelling.

That be belligerent nuff for ya??


57 posted on 09/30/2005 5:20:23 PM PDT by calljack (Sometimes your worst nightmare is just a start.)
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To: mad puppy


"Let me say two things:
1) he is right and I have no problem with what he said
2) he should have known that saying something like that was going to land him in this hot water."

What you are saying here is exactly what I thought when I heard him say it. I really like Bill Bennett but thought he may have stepped in it a bit here.


58 posted on 09/30/2005 8:21:57 PM PDT by westmichman (I vote Republican for the children and the poor!)
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To: cgk
Bennett's response was direct, forceful and reasoned. He pointed out the policy he mentioned was outrageous and that's why no one in their right mind would contemplate it. In other words, he made the same point Jonathan Swift made three centuries ago about the Irish - you could do it but its morally repugnant. And here the Democrats go around twisting what he said to be the opposite of the point he made on his show. They're the ones who should be apologizing, not Bennett. If telling the truth gets you damned today, then I'm proud to stand in this good man's company.

(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
59 posted on 10/01/2005 5:15:25 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: mad puppy
I think he realized some people would miss the point. The Democrats ARE stuck on stupid. More to the point, why are they offended about abortion? After all they're the ones who favor unrestricted abortion and here the irony of it all is they condemned Bennett for at first glance, endorsing their position! So what where they so upset about? It doesn't make sense and one doesn't need to be reminded the Left doesn't believe either in moral absolutes as a standard for our society.

(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
60 posted on 10/01/2005 5:19:45 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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