Are people too gobsmacked to comment? I listened and thought I'd find a million comments here.
After learning of the guest/subject a couple of days go, I immersed myself in information about the current crime wave. The Wilfred Reilly appearance on Coleman Hughes's podcast, for one example. There I heard that of all violent crime offenders, 5 percent of them commit half the violent crimes. Meaning, if you have a population with 100,000 violent criminals, you can cut violent crime in half by locking up just 5,000 of them. Chesa Boudin and his ilk seem hellbent on releasing that 5 percent. All the work society did in identifying and imprisoning these bad apples, the Democrats -- in the interest of winning this or that election -- are undoing.
Dr. Loury, I don't know when you and John record your videos, but I hope you can discuss Davide Giri, which comes just two years after Tessa Majors. Three University of Chicago students have been killed thus far in 2021. A Temple student was recently killed, and a high school kid in Florida. These are not gun-toting druggies with outstanding warrants meeting their end at 2am in a dive bar parking lot. These are law-abiding citizens walking down the street minding their own business, often in broad daylight.
A little bit of digging reveals that all of the perps were black bangers from the nearby ghetto. Last week Glenn was so angry that he was close to tears talking about how ashamed he is every time it's revealed that the perp is black. What else is there for him to say or talk about? Do you expect John to agree that the Democrats/Progressives are the problem? That would be worth hearing, but it ain't going to happen.
I think there's a lot to talk about. That two of the victims were from the Columbia/Barnard campus almost demands John discuss the matter. Also, the calls for "social justice" and "prison reform" and "bail reform" are starting to sound dangerously naive.
Discussing how many Princeton chemistry professors will be POC in the year 2060 seems far less pressing than ensuring people in 2022 can walk safely down the street.
Are people too gobsmacked to comment? I listened and thought I'd find a million comments here.
After learning of the guest/subject a couple of days go, I immersed myself in information about the current crime wave. The Wilfred Reilly appearance on Coleman Hughes's podcast, for one example. There I heard that of all violent crime offenders, 5 percent of them commit half the violent crimes. Meaning, if you have a population with 100,000 violent criminals, you can cut violent crime in half by locking up just 5,000 of them. Chesa Boudin and his ilk seem hellbent on releasing that 5 percent. All the work society did in identifying and imprisoning these bad apples, the Democrats -- in the interest of winning this or that election -- are undoing.
Dr. Loury, I don't know when you and John record your videos, but I hope you can discuss Davide Giri, which comes just two years after Tessa Majors. Three University of Chicago students have been killed thus far in 2021. A Temple student was recently killed, and a high school kid in Florida. These are not gun-toting druggies with outstanding warrants meeting their end at 2am in a dive bar parking lot. These are law-abiding citizens walking down the street minding their own business, often in broad daylight.
A little bit of digging reveals that all of the perps were black bangers from the nearby ghetto. Last week Glenn was so angry that he was close to tears talking about how ashamed he is every time it's revealed that the perp is black. What else is there for him to say or talk about? Do you expect John to agree that the Democrats/Progressives are the problem? That would be worth hearing, but it ain't going to happen.
I think there's a lot to talk about. That two of the victims were from the Columbia/Barnard campus almost demands John discuss the matter. Also, the calls for "social justice" and "prison reform" and "bail reform" are starting to sound dangerously naive.
Discussing how many Princeton chemistry professors will be POC in the year 2060 seems far less pressing than ensuring people in 2022 can walk safely down the street.