in , , , , , , , , ,

Jeanine Pirro Calls Out D.C.’s Anarchy, Demands Accountability

America is waking up to something that should alarm every law‑abiding citizen: what many of us call anarchy in the streets. Greg Kelly used his platform to call attention to the chaos and to applaud U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro for finally using the tools of justice to push back against the culture of permissiveness that has allowed these takeovers to flourish. Conservatives should be thankful that voices on the right are amplifying a common‑sense response to lawlessness.

Jeanine Pirro has been blunt: the problem isn’t just kids behaving badly, it’s grown adults and political institutions that refuse to hold anyone accountable — including parents. Pirro has publicly said prosecutors can and should look at statutes like contributing to the delinquency of a minor and use juvenile court authority to pressure parents who knowingly let their children run wild. That is the sort of no‑nonsense enforcement Americans wanted years ago instead of endless excuses.

This isn’t theoretical. Washington, D.C. has seen “teen takeovers” spiral into real violence and property damage, including a brawl at a Navy Yard Chipotle that drew an FBI response and national attention. The scenes of packed streets, vandalized businesses, and terrified small business owners are the predictable outcome when officials shrug and treat public safety as optional. If prosecutors are willing to hold parents and organizers to account, it will send the deterrent signal our cities desperately need.

Yet instead of decisive action, the D.C. Council punted on emergency measures while residents paid the price. Mayor Bowser and city leaders were forced into rhetoric and half‑steps, and the U.S. attorney rightly called them out for not doing their job to protect citizens from the consequences of permissive policies. When politicians choose optics over order, ordinary Americans suffer — and conservatives must never forget who benefits from the chaos of inaction.

Good prosecutors like Jeanine Pirro and outspoken conservatives like Greg Kelly are doing what the rest of the system has refused to: naming the problem and demanding consequences. Holding parents legally and financially responsible when they enable or ignore their children’s criminal behavior is not cruelty; it’s accountability, and it restores the basic social contract between families and the community. If we want safe streets and thriving businesses, we support policies and prosecutors who are willing to enforce the law without bowing to political correctness.

Hardworking Americans know what freedom means: the right to walk down a sidewalk without fearing a mob or watching your neighborhood turn into a headline. It’s time for patriots — voters, parents, business owners — to stand behind law‑and‑order leaders who will reclaim our streets and hold the negligent accountable. We should back prosecutors who act, media voices who call out the failure, and policies that respect victims instead of protecting excuses.

Written by admin

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

President Donald Trump Eyes Permanent South Lawn Helipad

President Donald Trump Eyes Permanent South Lawn Helipad

Elon Musk’s Vision: American Innovation is the Key to Real Miracles