Home » In Chicago, more anarcho-tyranny – and the mayor is in favor of it

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In Chicago, more anarcho-tyranny – and the mayor is in favor of it — 11 Comments

  1. I know it would never pass legal muster today, but for such criminals we need to revert to Tombstone AZ justice as was practiced in the old west: a long drop on a short rope after a 20min bar room trial.

  2. A major problem is slack judges. “72 arrests, eight felony convictions, and seven misdemeanor convictions”. What we are doing isn’t working. We have to make judges accountable. I realize that isn’t how we used to do things, and they mostly worked OK for a long time. But for about 60 years (if not more) things have been getting worse and worse.

    I also have to point out that they didn’t used to work all that well. I grew up in NY, and I’m not sure there were ANY honest judges. If there were, they were rare.

    But at a minimum we may just have to take all discretion away from them. Set, fixed sentences, across the board. Not ideal, but given that we cannot trust the judges we have to show even minimum judgement, that’s what we have to do.

    Another I’ve see, is that any time a felon you let off without prison commits another felony, that’s one strike against the judge. Three strikes means suspension. Second suspension entails loss of the judgeship.

    There may well be better ways. But we really have to get these self-styled deities under control.

  3. “By that time, Reed had had “72 arrests, eight felony convictions, and seven misdemeanor convictions — a total of 32 years in and out of the criminal justice system.”

    “the judge refused to incarcerate him, instead setting him free with an ankle bracelet monitor,”

    In this case, presumably the judge had the legal option of incarceration. If so, this judge is complicit in the murderous assault. If not legally, certainly morally. And laws, at creation, are based in the morality/zeitgiest of their time.

    neo states; “It is immoral to allow criminals free reign to harm the population.”

    That’s not a ‘bug’. That’s a feature. Those on the hard left intend to destroy America and build upon its ashes a new utopia.

  4. I’m with GB…
    Don’t for a minute think this situation is accidental. Just like the nonexistent border.
    We’re getting what the left intends.

  5. Sennacherib, hasn’t Chicago always been this way, just rather more blatant now?

    I suppose there was more law and order in the days of the Richard Daley’s but that was long ago.

  6. When Rahm Emanuel won the election for mayor my friends from back home (Louisville) teased me a bit about that. I told them at the time, you don’t understand, this is by far the least bad option in this city. Even I didn’t realize how right I was.

  7. I’m convinced Chicago was built over an Indian burial ground.
    Usually it’s restaurant locations – or the house down the street from me – but some places just seem to be cursed.

  8. Marisa no it’s never been like this. I tend to think like John+Guilfoyle. Chicago has always been a violent place this is different.

  9. roaming around assaulting the innocent.

    99 percent of the horsepower expended in articles about such repeat assaults is deflected to agonizing – always unsuccessfully – about what’s to do with the nominal pobrecitos who commit the assaults. I’d suggest that 98 of that 99 percent should be henceforth deflected and turned to the details of the REAL pobrecitos who suffer those assaults, with sincere demands that the end of such ‘roaming around’ be immediately curtailed by all means necessary.

  10. He’s right. You can’t incarcerate your way out of this. We’ll just have to shoot the bastards.

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