It seems like every day there is another news story about a violent attack, robbery or crime spree by illegal immigrants in America. The danger has increased exponentially in Democrat-run cities across the nation. The nature of the crimes are both mundane and unthinkable.
College student Laken Riley was murdered by an illegal immigrant while jogging.
An illegal immigrant in Texas killed five people last year, including a nine-year-old boy.
In Houston, 12-year-old Jocelyn Nungaray was murdered by two illegal immigrants.
In Aurora, CO and Chicago, IL, armed Venezuelan gangs have taken over entire apartment complexes, a shocking third-world development in the most developed nation on earth.
These are just a few of the bigger stories reported. The nation is teeming with thousands more stories of violent confrontations with illegal immigrants. On my podcast, I interviewed model Victoria Henley about her harrowing experience in the New York subway system. Victoria was escorting her grandmother through the subway when a man kicked from behind, pushing her down the stairs. As it turns out, the man was an illegal immigrant with five prior arrests. As if that weren’t bad enough, Victoria returned to her Times Square hotel to discover her video and photography equipment had been stolen. Victoria is still awaiting resolution to both those cases in New York City.
The New York Post ran an article this week with some startling data - up to 75% of the arrests in Midtown Manhattan are of illegal immigrants.
Across New York, recently arrived migrants are flooding the criminal justice system — at far higher rates than public officials have acknowledged.
Police sources shared with The Post a staggering estimate that as many as 75% of the people they’ve been arresting in Midtown Manhattan in recent months for crimes like assault, robbery and domestic violence are migrants. In parts of Queens, the figure is more than 60%, sources there estimate.
On any given day, Big Apple criminal court dockets are packed with asylum seekers who have run afoul of the law.
Fox News reporter Bill Melugin keeps a regular log of the anarchy at the border.
There is no other way to describe what is happening right now…
This. Is. Chaos.
And that is precisely the point. If you’re looking around and feeling like everything is crazy right now, that’s because everything is crazy right now. It’s not your imagination. We are at critical mass, and the powers-that-be want it that way.
That’s what the Occupy Wall Street movement was about. That’s what the Summer o’ BLM was about. That’s what the Hamas protests are about. That’s why the Democrats refuse to address the open border.
Disruption is the goal. Chaos is the vehicle.
The strength of America has been her stability. Our economy, our social structures, our government…as regimes and systems around the world have changed decade-to-decade, America has remained a beacon of freedom and stability for hundreds of years. Stable people vote like stable people. Stable people don’t need to be rescued by Big Government. Stable people aren’t dependent on Big Government. Stable people make their own decisions. Stable people are harder to control.
How does an enemy dismantle a superpower in which life is prosperous, citizens are relatively safe and the future is always bright?
They must make life hard. They must make life unpredictable. They must kick out the legs of the stool that holds up the institutions of stability and create unsteady ground beneath our feet. They must create fear. They must create chaos.
People need to be desperate enough to do two things:
Turn to the government for more protection, usually in the form of more laws and more restrictions on citizens.
Take the law into their own hands, creating a vigilante atmosphere in which law enforcement is rendered useless. When people can’t depend on safety, fear and retribution become their masters.
They want us to be miserable. Misery breeds subjection.
This means, of course, those of us who aren’t ready to give up America to the gods of chaos must be especially engaged this election cycle. We need to vote for the things we value, and we need to fight hard to win back power from those who want to wield it rather than return it to the people.
But just leaving it to the vote can feel exceptionally frustrating. That is one act on one day by one person. I consider it rather weak to just dump our societal concerns on people and then leave them to believe all they have to work with is a vote.
No. You must become an evangelist for peace - and make no mistake, sometimes peace comes at the end of a war. Being a peacemaker does not always mean being passive. Being a peacemaker is a task that must be employed in all parts of our lives.
As we wait for our government to (hopefully) catch up to the problem, it is incumbent upon us to do our jobs as citizens and work to lower the temperature of the chaos around us.
Speak reason and calmness into heated conversations. Speak truth. Don’t shy away from your positions just because you know others will be made uncomfortable. Peace needs a presentation. Many of the people you talk to don’t even know the other side of the equation, having been dependent on the foul legacy media for all their information. Sometimes peace looks like information.
Be a happy warrior. Battles are painful, but the goal is glorious…peace.
Demand your institutions - your churches, your schools, your municipalities - address the chaos where they can. Don’t let the people around you shrink from the discussions. Nothing can be solved if we are too cowardly to lay things out on the table together and figure it all out. Someone needs to be courageous enough to be the first to step on the battlefield.
Let it be you.
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"But just leaving it to the vote can feel exceptionally frustrating. That is one act on one day by one person. I consider it rather weak to just dump our societal concerns on people and then leave them to believe all they have to work with is a vote."
Thank you for acknowledging this - it pisses me off when you hear smug "well, that's what you voted for!" platitudes. No, I did NOT vote for it. But you are correct in that the change has to come from us - we have outsourced our civic duties for so long, that we have forgotten that we are the ones with the power to save ourselves.
This has been the goal for the elitist almost since the USA was formed. It has always been a possibility as Reagan pointed out. I had not thought I'd ever see it in my lifetime, but i was wrong. The election of Obama was when things really started ramping up. Hilary was the chose child of that election, and Obama was to go after her. When he won, the elitist moved up their timeline for "Chaos" and the ruin of the USA. We can still "win", but each time they claim a "victory" it diminishes our ability to recover. I've been beating this drum since they made a scapegoat of Nixon, but most just thought I was crazy.