Well, there’s this:

Mr. Kilmeade was discussing the murder on air with his co-hosts Lawrence Jones and Ainsley Earhardt when Mr. Jones said that homeless people who did not accept help in the form of resources funded by public money should “be locked up in jail.”

“Or involuntary lethal injection, or something,” Mr. Kilmeade said. “Just kill ’em.”

Watch the clip.

Mr. Jones and Ms. Earhardt did not challenge his statement or elaborate on it. Mr. Jones answered, “Yeah,” before Ms. Earhardt asked Mr. Kilmeade, “Why did it have to get to this point?” to further their conversation.

Mr. Jones and Ms. Earhardt did not challenge his statement. Right.

Back in 2011, this:

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who has been targeted by gay rights groups in the past, was asked by a moderator at the Fox News-Google debate in Orlando Thursday night about the repeal this week of the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy toward openly gay and lesbian service members serving in the military.

“In 2010, when I was deployed to Iraq, I had to lie about who I was, because I’m a gay soldier, and I didn’t want to lose my job,” said Stephen Hill, whose image was projected on a large TV screen in the debate hall. “My question is, under one of your presidencies, do you intend to circumvent the progress that’s been made for gay and lesbian soldiers in the military?”

Santorum launched into an impassioned defense of re-instating the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy.

Let’s take a quote from HBO’s The Newsroom for this one:

That was a big room full of Republican primary voters booing an American combat soldier who, as he was speaking, was in combat. The audience members who were booing were in Orlando. Soon they’ll surely be in hell, though not soon enough.


In the 1920 book Die Freigabe der Vernichtung Lebensunwerten Lebens (english translation: Allowing the Destruction of Life Unworthy of Life) the authors argued that some living people who were brain damaged, intellectually disabled and psychiatrically ill were “mentally dead”, “human ballast” and “empty shells of human beings”.

In 1924’s Mein Kampf, the author wrote that one day racial hygiene “will appear as a deed greater than the most victorious wars of our present bourgeois era.”

From 1939 until 1945, between 275,000 and 300,000 people were killed in psychiatric hospitals in Germany and the surrounding area under a program which became known as Aktion T4.


And in 2025, Brian Kilmeade called for the killing of mentally ill and homeless people.

Kilmeade’s apology was weak shit, too.