When President Trump held a press conference at the White
House, in which he declared that he has federalized the capital police force,
he made the excellent point that there are 3500 officers in that district, yet
Mayor Bowser is requesting 500 more. “That’s a lot of police officers for a
small area,” he said. He went on to say that more cops wouldn’t be needed if
they were allowed to do their job. Trump announced that, he will deploy the National
Guard and that Attorney General Pam Bondi will be taking command of the
Metropolitan Police Department and DEA Administrator Terry Cole will be interim
federal commissioner of the force. Bondi said “Let me be crystal clear. Crime in D.C.
is ending and ending today. We are going to use every power we have to fight
criminals here.”
It’s easy to assume that such talk is just the repetitious rhetoric that
we’ve heard from political leaders for decades. We’ve been hearing them say
that violent crime will not be tolerated on the streets of our cities, as if
saying it will cause the rampaging thugs to reform their wicked ways. Yet, with
no strong action to back it up, the rapists, muggers, carjackers, et al, will
have a good laugh as they continue to rip off the decent people of their
communities. The problem is that the bad guys have no fear of the good guys.
However, what Trump has embarked on will change that equation. When
law-enforcement personnel know they are backed up by courageous leaders at the
top of the government, we’ll soon see how quickly chaos ends.
Every city has a trained army of cops who know how to curb crime, and
they risk their lives every day to accomplish that goal. But how many of them
are going to risk jail terms, lawsuits, and public condemnation each time they
get involved in a violent confrontation? When cops read about their fellow
officers being thrown under the bus for doing the job they were trained to do,
they’re very likely to hesitate when they arrive at a crime scene. That
hesitation often costs them, and others, their lives. Keep in mind, there are
savage people who prowl the streets every day looking for easy prey. The only
thing that deters them is police presence, and even that is becoming less
worrisome to the recidivist thugs because they have no fear of the feckless
system that masquerades as justice.
When criminals don’t fear cops, how safe is the average civilian? During
my experience working in high crime areas for 20 years with NYPD, I learned
that residents of most neighborhoods want tough cops on patrol. They’re afraid
to go public with their support because they have to live in those areas where
such support has resulted in brutal reprisals. Many feel as though they’re
hostages in their own homes. Those who live in low crime districts have no idea
what it’s like to be as afraid to walk in the street as it is to remain in one’s
residence. Hence, whether it’s the nation’s capital, or any other municipality
in our country, we must come to a time in which we agree to let cops do their
job. Not only do they know who the reprobates are, they know where they are. When
reducing crime in any area, a good start is to break up the gangs that
terrorize whole sections of that zone. Me and my plainclothes investigation
squad knew who the leaders were, and we took them to a place where we could
reason with them. If they didn’t get our drift, we took a different approach;
we showed up at one of their secret strategy sessions and tried reasoning with
them in front of their fellow thugs.
I’ll leave the reasoning approach to your imagination. But suffice to
say, when you introduce thugs to the raw tactics they use against innocent
people; when they know what it feels like to be rushed to a hospital; when they
feel the pain and the fear that they’re used to perpetrating against their
victims; when they no longer have control over their circumstances and no one
to appeal to for help, it’ll change their attitude toward others in their
orbit. Moreover, when they learn that any further criminal behavior will result
in similar types of behavior modification, they’re likely to abandon a life of
crime. Some liberals will read this and say we took the law into our own hands.
Au contraire, we did what the law is supposed to do; we curbed crime and
punished criminals. If those oblivious handwringers lived in the vicious jungle
known as urban America, instead of their ivory tower, gated communities, they’d
be cheering us on too.
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