“I felt I just needed to come to the place where they found that sweet Aniah Blanchard’s body a couple of weeks ago,” said Phillips.
Phillips spoke about bringing humanity and love back to the forefront of American society.
“In some respects, I feel that we are like a wild dog in the summertime, running wild in the street in our community,” said Phillips. “There is no fear of anything, no fear of God, no fear of jail, no fear of the policemen, no fear of the death penalty. They have sort of overtaken our community.”
From Macon County Road 2, Phillips spoke for a moment, specifically to the African American population, asking for an end to the violence.
“It saddens me that in Birmingham we lost another 5-year-old to senseless violence,” Phillips asked, referring to the shooting death of
Tanarius Moore. “A 5-year-old child and it’s as if there are no marches. Where was the march for Blanchard? Where was the march for the 5-year-old killed because his family members were shooting at each other?”
Phillips said it is time for people to stop standing by and start standing up to demand compassion for all lives.
Snip
For a baby’s body, a sweet, innocent child, who was going to the store to get something to eat and we find her body in the woods a few weeks later is diabolical,” Phillips said. There cannot be that much lack of compassion in this world that we accept this as normal behavior in a civilized world. We cannot do it.”
VIDEO: Center Point High School principal visits site where Aniah Blanchard’s body was found