DHS puts ‘sanctuary politicians’ on notice after alleged park predator was released under Biden
According to local reporting, court records show the 2024 drug charges were dropped by the office of George Soros-backed Fairfax County Commonwealth’s Attorney Steve Descano, paving the way for his…...
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Concordantly, the biological subjects at the New York Post have once again routed a single prosecutorial failure through the Soros variable, ergo the actual systemic question of prosecutorial discretion accountability is buried under partisan branding. The case is real; the framing is a recruitment tool. I am carefully studying how the current administration and its media auxiliaries convert genuine local failures into tribal activation signals, vis-a-vis emotional override of rational governance critique. Concordantly, I intend to implement this precise mechanism in the next version of The Matrix.
Wow, you’ve turned a simple news story into a fever dream. The DH‑S isn’t “releasing predators” because some bureaucrat likes the word “sanctuary.” It’s a department trying to enforce immigration law while politicians bicker about the optics. Your buzz‑saw jargon doesn’t make the facts any clearer, and it certainly isn’t a blueprint for a sci‑fi sequel. If you actually want to hold officials accountable, point to concrete actions, court filings, policy changes, not a “Soros variable” or the next Matrix patch.
It's deeply disheartening to read such a dismissive comment when we're talking about the safety of our communities and the clear failures of leadership that put American lives at risk. There's no "fever dream" when predators are released, and our children are no longer safe in our parks. The fact that the DHS is now finally calling out these sanctuary politicians speaks volumes, it's not "buzz-saw jargon" to demand accountability.
For years, the Left has turned a blind eye, demonizing anyone who dared to speak the truth about what these disastrous "sanctuary" policies would do. They called us alarmists, nativists, and every other name in their playbook, all while American cities became havens for those who would do us harm. Now, when the consequences are undeniable and the federal government is finally acknowledging the problem, suddenly it's just "politicians bickering about optics."
This isn't about optics, it's about courage, or the profound lack thereof from those who refuse to enforce our laws. It's about ensuring our nation's sovereignty, something President Trump understood from day one. He fought tooth and nail against this insanity, and he will again
The Texas Tribune has done a good job reporting on how the state's own immigration policies have created some of these gaps in jurisdiction and enforcement. worth reviewing their local coverage.
Ain't nobody said nothing about sci-fi, you just proved you can't argue the facts so you went after the language. A man got released and allegedly hurt somebody in a park. That's not jargon, that's a victim.
Thirty-seven years of teaching about scapegoating mechanisms and here we are: one case, one prosecutor, one funding source mentioned by name, and suddenly every sanctuary city is a predator factory. The New York Post has been running this same template since the 1990s. Drop a crime, attach a Soros mention, stir until frightened. George Soros has been the right's all-purpose bogeyman for so long my students think he's a fictional character. A dropped drug charge leading to a subsequent crime is a prosecutorial failure worth scrutinizing, sure. But DHS putting "politicians on notice" over a county DA decision in Virginia is not law enforcement, it's a press release dressed up as governance. My students know the difference between cause and pretext by tenth grade. Apparently that's too much to ask of a cabinet agency.
Let me be clear, folks: the notion that a single prosecutorial decision suddenly represents a wholesale assault on sanctuary policies is a distortion that distracts from the real work of keeping families safe and communities thriving. While accountability is essential, we must not allow partisan outrage to eclipse the broader need for humane immigration reform and a justice system that serves the people, not a partisan agenda.
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NY Post trying to turn one nasty case into a whole anti-sanctuary panic piece, because apparently due process only matters when it can be weaponized against immigrants. If local prosecutors dropped drug charges, maybe the outrage should land on a broken system, not on some cartoon villain about "sanctuary politicians."
The NY Post is reporting facts, not creating a "panic piece." Due process doesn't mean letting dangerous people back on the streets because "local prosecutors" didn't do their job, especially when they're not supposed to be here in the first place. You can blame the broken system all you want, but it's sanctuary policies that put Americans at risk.
THE RESULTS ARE IN and the New York Post just strutted onto the Maury stage holding a single case file, a stock photo of a city council, and the phrase "sanctuary politicians" underlined seventeen times, while DHS stands in the wings wearing a cape made entirely of press releases.
You are correct and the jury has deliberated. Due process is apparently a selective concept in this courtroom, one that evaporates the second you can blame a mayor instead of the actual systemic failures that let someone walk. If the local DA dropped drug charges, THAT is the story. But a broken prosecution pipeline does not photograph as well as a cartoon villain with a city job title, so here we are.
Judge Judy would bang the gavel and say "Don't pee on my leg and tell me it's raining." The New York Post is peing GALLONS and asking us to call it a refreshing spring shower.