“After 20 Years I Quit”

This Zero Hedge article is exactly the point. The legal system is being weaponized against us.

From Jessie Kelly:

The right fails to fight back correctly because it fails to get the right mindset and it fails to get the right mindset because it fails on language. I still see a lot of “soft on crime DA” talk when I see them talk about Soros DAs.

Let’s say I told you we’re going on a hike. But I told you we’re only going 50 yards and it’s all downhill. No big deal, right? You don’t even have to drink water or get the right shoes for that.

But then we get out there and it’s a 10 mile forced march through rolling hills. You’d be toast, wouldn’t you? Because I used the wrong words and put you in the wrong mindset and you were therefore unprepared for what was to come.

George Soros DAs are not “soft on crime” DAs. They are tip-of-the-spear communist warriors out there to turn violent criminals loose and arrest their political opponents.


They are there to purposely cause more murder, rape, and mayhem because a society in chaos is a society more apt to accept communist rule.

They are there to track down and arrest anyone from Donald Trump to Daniel Penny. Anyone who might stand in the way of those goals.

They’re not flowery progressives who are “soft on crime” because they just have a different approach to law enforcement. When you talk like that it puts the Right in the wrong mindset.

We do this with every issue.

Every one.

The communists never do this.

They’ll take an issue and point to you and say, “Look at this Nazi who wants to murder children!” That gets their people in the right mindset.

~Jessie Kelly



We as conservatives need to recognize these pitfalls our side continuously falls for. There is no longer a balance...the Marxists don't want balance

Here from the article you posted:

The current people in charge of this state, including the [State’s Attorney’s Office] suffer from a fundamental misunderstanding…we live in a society with adversarial court and criminal justice processes. Defense attorneys, legal aid clinics, Public Defenders, defendant advocate groups…they fight like hell to protect the rights of criminal defendants. And they should. Their work is as noble as ours. But we have an obligation to fight like hell on behalf of the People. It should go without saying that this must be done ethically and evenhandedly. When both sides vigorously defend their positions, a balance is reached between protecting rights while preserving some sort of order and safety. Once we start doing too much of the defense’s job, once we pull our punches, once we decide that it’s worth risking citizens’ lives to have a little social experiment, that balance is lost. The unavoidable consequences are what we are witnessing in real time, an increase in crime of all kinds, businesses and families pulling up stakes, and the bodies piling up; the whole time with a State’s Attorney who insists that there is nothing to see here, and if there is it must be someone else’s fault. And then they wonder why they cannot retain experienced prosecutors or even hire new ones…it’s because any true prosecutor recognizes the importance of this balance, and that they will not be permitted to be a prosecutor under this administration.
 

NYC Marine veteran charged in death of man 'making threats and scaring passengers'​



Outreach workers were so familiar with Neely that he was on the city's "Top 50" list – an internal roster kept by the Department of Homeless Services of people most in need of help, the local paper reported.

<snip>
Meanwhile, a 66-year-old woman who witnessed the altercation told The New York Post she was praying for Penny.

Neely, a 30-year-old homeless man suffering from mental illness, was "threatening passengers," she said.

"He said, ‘I don’t care. I’ll take a bullet, I’ll go to jail’ because he would kill people on the train," the woman said of Neely. "He said, ‘I would kill a motherf—er. I don’t care. I’ll take a bullet. I’ll go to jail.’"

Penny didn't step in until Neely's behavior got out of hand, the retiree said. She thanked the young man afterward for protecting the passengers.


snip>

Neely had a history of violent attacks on subway riders – including, in 2021, punching a 67-year-old woman in the face, breaking her nose and orbital bone, court records obtained by Fox News Digital show.

Four months earlier, he allegedly slugged another woman in the face on the subway platform, the records reveal.

In 2019, he allegedly sucker-punched two men in the face on different subway platforms one month apart, breaking one victim's nose, according to the documents.
 
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