Chicago Mayor Comments On Trump’s Crime Policy

Chicago has always been a hard city, but under Mayor Brandon Johnson it’s becoming something worse: a sanctuary for criminals and a nightmare for victims. His latest sermon against common sense isn’t just tone-deaf—it’s dangerous.

According to Johnson, if you believe in locking up violent offenders, you’re not a defender of justice. You’re “racist.” You’re “unholy.” And, in his own words, you’re stupid.

That’s the message to law-abiding residents of a city where weekends bring double-digit shootings, where carjackings are routine, where parents bury children lost to crossfire. The people crying out for safety, begging for relief, are being told by their mayor that they’re the problem.


This is the twisted theology of the modern Democratic Party. Punishing criminals is immoral. Protecting your family is bigotry. And the only acceptable response to blood-soaked streets is to point fingers at voters, not thugs. Johnson isn’t acting like a mayor—he’s acting like a public defender for predators.

But here’s the reality he doesn’t want to face: prison isn’t racist. Prison is justice. It’s where rapists, shooters, and carjackers belong. There’s nothing “holy” about watching children gunned down at playgrounds while politicians protect criminals with excuses and rhetoric. What’s truly unholy is treating the lives of law-abiding families as disposable in the name of ideology.


Chicagoans are paying the price. They’re the ones who can’t park a car without it being stolen before the ink dries on the registration. They’re the ones who dodge bullets while City Hall debates the morality of locking up killers. And they’re the ones who will suffer most as Johnson lectures them from his pulpit of progressive fantasy.

The tragedy here is obvious. Chicago deserves better. Its people deserve leaders who will fight for the innocent, not bend over backward for the guilty. But the nation should take note: Johnson is giving us the unfiltered Democratic platform. Pro-criminal. Anti-victim. Wrapped in sanctimonious language about “equity” and “justice.”