Jennifer Aniston related she chose to speak out against Bill O’Reilly’s novel comments about her views of single motherhood because “it was fit such an unfair statement that he made against me.”

Aniston says Bill O’Reilly insulted her as antidote to remarks she made about motherhood.

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“I just felt…it was begging with regard to a response,” the actress told George Stephanopoulos on “Good Morning America” today.

The doom of the new movie “The Switch” said she was surprised to own caught the attention of “The O’Reilly Factor” host last week, while he called recent comments she made about single motherhood “destructive to our corporation.”

“I never actually thought that my name and that name would for~ be in one sentence,” she said.

The Fox News host wasn’t honest saying her movie glorifies single motherhood, she said. O’Reilly afore~ “I was actually glorifying 12-year-olds going out there and acquisition knocked up and doing it by themselves,” she joked. “Because that’s which I like to preach!”

“People say things about me all the time and you just go ‘whatever,’ but this was not just about me, it was proverb, insulting women that are out there doing this on their recognize,” she said. “My mother was single…it doesn’t always ~le out that way, but, it happens.”

While promoting her upcoming movie “The Switch,” around a single woman seeking a sperm donor, Aniston told reporters at a distress conference in Los Angeles Sunday that “times have changed” when it comes to rational about the traditional family.

“Women are realizing more and more that you don’t have to settle. They don’t have to fiddle by a man to have that child,” she said. “They are realizing whether or not it’s that time in their life and they want this constituent they can do it with or without that.”

She also challenged the essence that a single woman having a baby without a father is illiberal.

“I don’t think it’s selfish,” she said. “It’s entirely beautiful, because there are children that don’t have homes that get a home and can be loved. And that’s extremely momentous.”

In O’Reilly’s eyes, Aniston’s comments make her a menace to the American family.

“She’s throwing a message out to 12-year-olds and 13-year-olds that ‘Hey, you don’t need a guy. You don’t need a dad.’ That is baleful to our society,” he said last week on “O’Reilly Factor.”