There is something pathetic about Oprah who feels she needs to agree with O'Reilly, and there is something even more pathetic:
A person who sees everything in black and white, in yes or no.
O'Reilly has stated a couple of years ago that things are either black or white, there are no greys.
O'Reilly advocates 'Life in Prison' for a first offense of 'anyone doing this kind of thing', shaking his fist at the audience [via link from Los Angeles].
O'Reilly demands that every father, living at home or not, must instill in his child that the father is the hero who must be trusted and who will come to his assistance, without saying what a child should do if molested by the father.
The problem with this is that all cases are not identical.
What about the early-20s person who is convinced (via fake ID) that the other person is over 18, but in fact is only 15?. What about a mentally challenged person?
Judges must be given discretion in sentencing. O'Reilly says sentences must be mandatory
O'Reilly says prosecutors have discretion what charges to prosecute. The judge should have that option.
But O'Reilly also failed to mention what penalty one should suffer if prosecuted for sexual harassment in a criminal court instead of a civil court where a $60 million demand was allegedly settled for $10 million