They Washed the Blood off the Streets By Techno Fog
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Sunday evening in Waukesha, Wisconsin wasn’t supposed to end like this. The city’s Christmas parade was to proceed through Main Street as scheduled, with families lined up in chairs and blankets and warm drinks observing an annual ritual pass by. They watched as the youth dance team and the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies waved to the crowd. And then they saw the horror of an SUV mowing the procession down, killing five and injuring nearly 50. One witness described holding a little girl’s head in his hand as she was seizing and “bleeding out of her ears.” Once the suspect, Darrell Brooks, Jr. was identified, the story became clear. Brooks was a career criminal (or a repeat offender, however you’d like to classify him), most recently accused of “running over the mother of his child with a vehicle in a gas station parking lot” on November 2. On November 5, he was charged with “second-degree recklessly endangering safety with domestic abuse assessments, disorderly conduct with domestic abuse assessments and felony bail jumping.” At the time of these offenses, he was already “on bail after being accused of shooting at his nephew in July 2020.” In other words, Brooks had already attempted to kill his nephew and his baby’s mother. He was a flight risk and a danger to the community. On November 19, the Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office let him go on $1,000 bail. Days later the firefighters were hosing down the blood off the streets. The release of a violent felon on $1,000 bail was the culmination of years of “reform” by Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm, who was touted in 2015 as a “national leader in law enforcement” – at least according to progressive values. As promoted by the liberal Vera Institute:
The people of Waukesha County didn’t sign up for this – they have their own district attorney. But their interests didn’t matter to Milwaukee County DA Chisholm. Waukesha County, just like the rest of Wisconsin, would be subjected to Chisholm’s preferred policies anyways. This wasn’t the first time Chisholm’s policies caused lives to end. And Chisholm predicted as much back in 2007, where he stated:
That “guarantee” came true back in 2013, where a felon was charged with reckless homicide after being “out of custody under a deferred prosecution agreement with Chisholm's office.” (Say what you want about Chisholm, but he keeps his promises.) Chisholm’s catch and release policies have long been a danger to the public – with repeat offenders, including those charged with felony sexual assault, high-volume cocaine and marijuana trafficking, armed robbery – being released back to the public under deferred prosecution agreements. The reality of these policies is why they are camouflaged in euphemism. “Criminal justice reform” sounds good – until you realize there’s a $1,000 cash bail for attempted murder. I agree that the voters are getting what they voted for – but that doesn’t mean they were always told what they would get. (We should also be aware that God’s judgment can be delivered by giving the public what they want.) Back to being subjected to Chisholm’s policies for a moment. The policies are just a small slice of the broader top-town revolution we see taking place in New York and San Francisco and Washington, D.C. (with D.C. setting national policy). Long ago, the progressives understood that the socialist revolution would never be achieved from the lower-classes as a whole. They recognized that real revolution would need to start at the top of American institutions and be thrust upon the rest of us. Thus the imposition of equity, critical race theory, etc. by the institutions Americans once revered: schools and the courts. Those institutions they feel they must destroy or reform for man’s emancipation here on earth: the justice system, family, religion, conservatism, the tradition of liberty, the “shared system of norms and values at the heart of Western society.” You’re a free subscriber to The Reactionary. For the full experience, become a paid subscriber. |
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