“Just a Little Street Crime: How Democrats Are Redefining Violence as Protest”
Update: 2025-10-14
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📰 Summary:
In this explosive episode, Lee and Terry dive into a shocking new phase of America’s political divide — where Democrats openly defend criminal acts against federal officers. After Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker suggested that ICE agents could face prosecution “after Trump can’t protect them,” Barack Obama added fuel to the fire, dismissing violent attacks on federal buildings as mere “ordinary street crime.”
The hosts connect these remarks to a wider cultural shift — one that excuses violence when it serves political ends. From Molotov cocktails at ICE facilities to break-ins at agents’ homes, the message from the left, they argue, is clear: if it’s “their” violence, it’s justified.
With comparisons to George Wallace’s defiance of federal law and Clinton-era deportations, Lee and Terry highlight how Democrat leadership has abandoned law and order for ideological loyalty. It’s a powerful, chilling commentary on what happens when a party decides that justice depends on who commits the crime, not what the crime is.
In this explosive episode, Lee and Terry dive into a shocking new phase of America’s political divide — where Democrats openly defend criminal acts against federal officers. After Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker suggested that ICE agents could face prosecution “after Trump can’t protect them,” Barack Obama added fuel to the fire, dismissing violent attacks on federal buildings as mere “ordinary street crime.”
The hosts connect these remarks to a wider cultural shift — one that excuses violence when it serves political ends. From Molotov cocktails at ICE facilities to break-ins at agents’ homes, the message from the left, they argue, is clear: if it’s “their” violence, it’s justified.
With comparisons to George Wallace’s defiance of federal law and Clinton-era deportations, Lee and Terry highlight how Democrat leadership has abandoned law and order for ideological loyalty. It’s a powerful, chilling commentary on what happens when a party decides that justice depends on who commits the crime, not what the crime is.
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