Back To The District Of Congo
When last we visited The District of Congo, aka Coruscant-On-The-Potomac, we looked at the rampant violent crime in our nation’s capitol. The statistics included cheerful news like this:
D.C. has recorded 161 homicides this year, a 28 percent increase over this time in 2022. In just over seven months, the city has surpassed the total number of killings that occurred in all of 2018 and is on track for the deadliest year in two decades.
It isn’t just murders of course. Crime of all sorts is rampant as our diverse population has responded to the police stepping back by engaging in an orgy of lawlessness and violence. Something that gets little attention but ought to get more is carjacking, a violent theft of a vehicle that has exploded in frequency all over the country. D.C. is no different.
House Administration Committee Chairman Bryan Steil, (R-Wis.) on Monday warned would-be visitors to Washington, D.C. of rising crime in the nation’s capital and advised people how to respond to criminal acts and to minimize the risk of being victimized by violence like carjackings.
The District of Columbia is currently struggling to contend with increased criminal activity that has many questioning the safety of living in the city at all. Compared to this point in 2022, data from the D.C. Metropolitan Police shows that homicides are up 28% and on pace to reach their highest levels in more than 20 years. Robberies, meanwhile, are up 67%. Residents have testified to increasingly driving for short distances due to fear of going outside.
Amid the crime wave, the Mexican consulate in Washington, D.C., has warned its citizens that “The city of Washington, D.C. is experiencing a significant increase in crime in areas previously considered safe. Take precautions. In an emergency, call 911.”
https://justthenews.com/government/local/holdlawmakers-warn-staffers-dc-crime-surge
Try to wrap your mind around that. Mexican citizens of a failed narcostate are being warned how dangerous the American capitol has become. D.C. is considered scary by Mexicans. More…..
Recommendations included not wearing jewelry on public transportation and leaving no valuables visible within one’s parked car to avoid attracting thieves.
To limit more aggressive incidents such as carjacking and armed robbery, some suggested leaving space between cars at red lights should one need to flee. Minimizing time using a mobile phone while walking to limit distractions was also suggested.
“It’s so concerning… to think in a city of just over 500,000 people that 5,000 cars have been stolen already this year,” Steil said during a Monday appearance on the “Just the News, No Noise” television show. “[T]hat’s 20 to 25 a day. Seven hundred of those have been the result of carjackings, where people are viciously thrown out of their cars and thrown out into the streets as the criminals drive away.”
Thanks to the power of diversity, Americans can’t wear the jewelry they want for fear of it being snatched. We are told to leave space to flee from carjackers and not talk on the phone out of fear of being assaulted while distracted.
Washington D.C. is supposed to represent America, a unique political entity that is home to the seat of government and many of our most majestic monuments. This city from which our rulers lord over the rest of us has become a crime ridden shithole. Over 5000 cars stolen already this year, 700 by carjacking? According to Hey Jackass! there have been 837 carjackings so far this year in Chicago….
….but Chicago is a city of 2.7 million people. Washington D.C. only has around 670,000 people, less than a quarter of the population of Chicago, but D.C. is right on Chicago’s tail in number of carjackings.
What is being done to D.C. is intentional. Just recently Congress had to override a D.C. law that would have reduced penalties for violent crime. The degradation of the capitol is just another humiliation ritual, forcing White Americans to watch as the storied capitol of the nation we built is degraded and turned into a violent hellhole.
They have a lot to answer for and we are going to need a lot more rope.