Tucker Carlson: 'Everyone Benefited' Because More Non-violent Blacks Were Jailed In The 1990s
Fox News host Tucker Carlson argued over the weekend that "everyone benefited" after the incarceration rate for non-violent drug crimes increased in the 1990s.
On Sunday's edition of Fox & Friends, Carlson opined that CBS host Stephen Colbert was "raising eyebrows" because he was seen wearing a Black Lives Matter wristband.
"Was his show the right outlet for this message?" the Fox News host said. "I assume he doesn't fully understand what Black Lives Matter is -- maybe he does."
Ashley Bell, whose 20/20 group bills itself as an alternative to Black Lives Matter, argued that activists should be partnering with police if they wanted to see change.
"You've got to have police officers at the table, you've got to have prosecutors, criminal justice experts," Bell explained. "Which is why the first thing 20/20 did is partner with the National Association of Black Police Officers so we can have a real discussion."
Bell added that his goal was to educate presidential candidates on the need to reduce the sentences of non-violent offenders.
"Well, I think there is wide consensus that the Clinton administration went a little overboard in the sentencing, for sure," Carlson agreed. "On the other hand, the crime rate went way down. And everyone benefited from that, particularly in black neighborhoods, which always have the highest crime rates."
"That was good for people who live in those neighborhoods and every neighborhood," he continued. "So you kind of have to balance those two imperatives."