LeBron James, others laud Good Samaritan who stopped teen fight
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. -- A video showing a man stopping a fight between two teenagers in New Jersey and refusing to leave until the boys shook hands has drawn millions of views and heaps of praise for his intervention.
The video has been viewed more than 20 million times since being posted on Facebook on Monday.
The video drew a retweet from Cleveland Cavaliers superstar LeBron James, who saluted the man “who stepped in and spoke real to our young generation.”
The clip starts with a fistfight in Atlantic City between two boys as other youths record it on their phones.
Ibn Ali Miller then walks up, gets between the two and tells the onlookers they’re cowards for recording the scuffle.
“Look, they laughing. Look,” Miller says while gesturing to the gathered crowd. “He’s got a big smile on his face. ... He’s supposed to be your man.”
The stranger then tells the teens they are “almost men” and need to start acting like it.
“Y’all got parents. Don’t make your parents look like this,” he said.
After learning from the teen combatants that they had no idea why they started fighting, the man refused to leave until they both shook hands.
“It’s a great thing to have the youth listen like that” Miller told the Press of Atlantic City. “That doesn’t always happen. Those young men impressed me”.
Miller said that he was running an errand for his mother while on a break from a class when he came across the fight.
“That scene that went down, that happens a lot in Atlantic City, and these kids are too young,” Miller told the newspaper, adding that it’s not the first fight he’s broken up and probably won’t be the last. “You can’t pick that ‘today, I’m gonna stop some kids from fighting’, but God does what he wills.”
“To me the fact that LeBron and others have seen it ... it’s cool, I’d be more excited when I was a younger man,” Miller told the newspaper, adding that his family isn’t on social media because of all of the negativity. “But I want people to take away from it to pay it forward. That’s it.”
One video of the fight weas made on the phone of one of the teens involved, Jamar Mobley, reports CBS Philly.
Mobley told the station the fight wasn’t staged.
CBS Philly says he posted the video online and within a day, there were more than 18 million views, including a retweet from James:
Mobley told CBS Philly he’s grateful for Ali. “Mr. Ibn Ali, I want to thank him a lot cause if it wasn’t for him it could have gone a whole other way,” he said.
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