Jeremy Glick (author)

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The Jeremy Glick interview as seen in Outfoxed — Top-left: Jeremy Glick speaks about his interview; top-right: Bill O'Reilly tells Glick to “shut up”; bottom-left: O'Reilly cuts Glick's mic and gestures for security to take Glick out of the studio;  bottom-right: O'Reilly criticizes Glick the next day, claiming Glick used “vile propaganda”.
The Jeremy Glick interview as seen in Outfoxed — Top-left: Jeremy Glick speaks about his interview; top-right: Bill O'Reilly tells Glick to “shut up”; bottom-left: O'Reilly cuts Glick's mic and gestures for security to take Glick out of the studio; bottom-right: O'Reilly criticizes Glick the next day, claiming Glick used “vile propaganda”.

Jeremy Matthew Glick is an author and activist, best known for his appearance on The O’Reilly Factor on 4 February 2003.

Glick is a co-author of the book, Another World Is Possible, and should not be confused with another Jeremy Glick, a passenger on hijacked UA flight 93.

In early 2003, Glick signed his name to an advertisement that protested United States-led military action in Afghanistan and compared the deaths from the attacks to fatalities incurred in prior U.S. military actions. O’Reilly found this “surprising” given that Glick’s father, Port Authority worker Barry Glick, was killed during the September 11, 2001 attack. Host Bill O'Reilly invited Glick on his show, and the two engaged in a heated argument (see External links below for transcript and video).

Contents

[edit] Appearance on The O'Reilly Factor

Glick began the interview speaking about his underlying beliefs with regard to the advertisement that he signed. O'Reilly responded stating “I don't think your father would be approving of this” and “I don't think he'd be equating this country as a terrorist nation as you are”. Glick responded “my father thought that Bush's presidency was illegitimate” and that he himself was not stating America was a terrorist nation.

When Glick explained why he felt it was immoral to invade Afghanistan, O'Reilly stated, “I don't want to debate world politics with you”.

The following exchange then took place:

GLICK: The reason why you care is because you evoke 9/11…
O'REILLY: Here's why I care.
GLICK: …to rationalize…
O'REILLY: Here's why I care…
GLICK: Let me finish. You evoke 9/11 to rationalize everything from domestic plunder to imperialistic aggression worldwide.
O'REILLY: OK. That's a bunch…
GLICK: You evoke sympathy with the 9/11 families.
O'REILLY: That's a bunch of crap. I've done more for the 9/11 families by their own admission — I've done more for them than you will ever hope to do, so you keep your mouth shut.

O'Reilly told Glick that he had a “warped view of this world and a warped view of this country”. O'Reilly noted that Glick “did not support the war in Afghanistan[;] [he] was against it”. Glick said that he had no desire to “brutalize and further punish” the people of Afghanistan. O'Reilly finished “who killed your father! who killed your father!” to which Glick answered that the people who hijacked the airplanes killed his father, not the people of Afghanistan. When O'Reilly pointed out that “al-Qaeda people” were trained in Afghanistan, Glick responded by claiming that their training was made possible by then CIA-director George H. W. Bush and that the United States was ultimately responsible. (As Media Matters for America noted, Glick was incorrect in his claim that George H.W. Bush was CIA Director when U.S. support was given to anti-Soviet Afghan forces. George H.W. Bush was CIA Director under Gerald Ford — such support did not occur until the subsequent Carter administration, under CIA Director Stansfield Turner.[1])

O'Reilly then stated, “Man, I hope your mom isn't watching this”; as Glick continued to speak, O'Reilly told him to “[s]hut up. Shut up.” Glick responded “Oh, please don't tell me to shut up.” To which O'Reilly said that he was ending the discussion “in [sic] respect for your father, who was a Port Authority worker, a fine American, who got killed unnecessarily by barbarians…” Later on, O'Reilly ordered his staff to turn off Glick's microphone, terminating the interview.

[edit] Post-show controversy

According to Rolling Stone, Glick admits that he insulted O'Reilly's show off-camera.[2] Glick alleges that O’Reilly, during the commercial break, told him to “get out of my studio before I tear you to fucking pieces!”[3] O’Reilly returned from the commercial break saying “I have to apologize. If I knew that guy Jeremy Glick was going to be like that, I never would have brought him in here, and I feel bad for his family. I really do.”

O’Reilly has since incorrectly stated on at least three occasions [4] that Glick remarked during the interview that George W. Bush orchestrated or had prior knowledge of the 9/11 attacks claiming “Glick was saying without a shred of evidence that President Bush, and Bush the elder, were directly responsible for 9/11” and “He came on this program and accused President Bush of knowing about 9/11 and murdering his own father.” [5].

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References