Right on cue, Tuesday night’s MSNBC coverage of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) heaped effusive praise on a team of Black Lives Matter mothers whose sons died in police-involved shootings as a “profound experience” for those in attendance just eight days after they trashed Patricia Smith over a speech about her son’s death in the 2012 Benghazi terror attack.

Naturally, convention coverage co-host Rachel Madow went immediately to PoliticsNation host and race-peddler Al Sharpton who hailed the DNC’s decision to showcase these mothers as a “huge move in terms of the body politic of this country because I think it really said that this is a real central issue in this country that needs to be dealt with but that it needs to be clear.”

“I was so happy the nation could see what we see that have worked with them. These are not activists. These are not people that were looking for an issue. These are mothers who became activists because of their situation and if people could understand that and understand this could be their child,” Sharpton added.

Turning to AM Joy host Joy Reid, Maddow chose not to invoke Smith’s emotional speech but instead trashed the Republican National Convention (RNC) for simply suggesting that Blue Lives Matter and All Lives Matter and teed Reid up to blast this “contrast.”

Reid obviously agreed and blasted Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke for leading “the crowd in this rousing cheer for the acquittal of the officers in the Freddie Gray case” before irresponsibly suggesting:

[Y]ou know, that moment when you have the sort of thunderous applause from that audience and you're thinking wow, if you're Freddie Gray's mom, you know, it's almost as if he didn't exist to the people in that other arena — that these boys, these children, these young people didn't exist[.]

Reid’s next comments about the BLM mothers stood in stark contrast to her colleagues Chris Matthews smearing Pat Smith as having “ruined” the night with her “gross accusation” about Hillary Clinton and Chuck Todd bashing Benghazi as “cheap unity” for the “lowest common denominator crowd”:

[F]or the Democrats to bring out their mothers, it takes them out of being a hashtag and makes them people, human beings who had moms, who had families, who had lives ahead of them, who in some cases were children, you know and it was a real profound experience seeing them all together.

Speaking to the instances in which she’s met them, Reid concluded by boasting of how “incredibly profound” their presence on the stage had been: “I've interviewed and met so many of these women individually. Seeing them together was incredibly profound. It really, really was and I think the Democrats, they might have moved some African-Americans to care about this election tonight.”

The relevant portion of the transcript from the 9:00 p.m. Eastern hour of MSNBC’s Democratic National Convention (DNC) coverage on July 26 can be found below.