Getting Involved in the Era of Soros DAs

Soros at the World Economic Form. Copyright by World Economic Forum swiss-image.ch/Photo by Michael Wuertenberg (Wikipedia Commons)

In the era of Soros DAs, the criminal is king.   Not only that, but the police are to be constantly scrutinized and indicted when possible.

In Austin, the Soros DA is Jose Garza who made going after the police his platform when he was first elected, and who has lived up to that promise.

In New York, the Soros DA is Alvin Bragg who not only got a 34-count felony conviction against Donald Trump, but also indicted a subway hero who stepped up to protect fellow passengers against a drugged-up homeless man who was shouting threats.

BREAKING:  Daniel Penny acquitted in subway chokehold death of Jordan Neely 

When you live in a Soros-DA city, you’d best think twice about doing the right thing – or even about using a firearm for your own protection.  You may be the good guy, but that may not matter.

AUDIO:  Random Samplings of a Logical Mind

We may live in Texas, but in our big cities, your local DA may side with the bad guys.

Remember, the Democratic Party has supported the Defund the Police Movement, and has seen it implemented in towns like Austin.  And now, with the conviction of APD officer Christopher Taylor, DA Garza has a notch in his belt.  As Garza took office, and after the Black Lives Matter riots shook the summer of 2020 following the death of George Floyd, Austin’s crime rate went up and the city experienced record homicides.

Other cities saw it too. 

After all, in the wake of Floyd’s “murder” conviction which was a given since Minneapolis and other urban areas had to avoid more racial unrest, it became politically incorrect to incarcerate too many people of color.  Big cities like New York instituted zero-bail laws to let criminals back on the street, where they invariably committed more crimes.  In some cities, police arrested the bad guys and the DAs let them back out. 

RELATED:  Derek Chauvin and O.J. Simpson at Opposite Ends of Injustice

Patriots who stormed the Capitol on January 6 became super-villains and BLM/Antifa rioters largely got away with far worse.  The Capital riot was not a good thing, but the media and Democrats blew it up far worse than it was, while excusing BLM because BLM is their political base.

Patriots who stormed the Capitol got involved.

That’s a mistake in today’s world.  But most of those who entered that day, and were tossed in jail for it thought they were supporting free and fair elections.

We now know beyond any doubt that the election of 2020 was not free and fair.  Democrats used mail-in balloting to harvest votes.  Pennsylvania, and perhaps other states, used the COVID pandemic to change their election laws in violation of their own state constitutions.  Fifty-one current and former members of the Intelligence Community lied by signing a letter that the Hunter Biden laptop was Russian disinformation when it was nothing of the sort.  Major media including ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, CNN, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Associated Press openly shilled for Biden.

RELATED:  Trump’s Revenge Must be Served Cold and Justified 

Those who entered the Capitol and broke windows and destroyed property should pay a price.  But they had a point.  The government has not gone after the BLM rioters with anything approaching such zeal as they did for the J6ers.

RELATED: How many people died in the Black Lives Matter Riots, January 6, and the Afghanistan Withdrawal? 

If you had been in Washington that day, and thought the election was stolen, you would have been better off to get on a plane and get the hell out of D.C.  Those that got involved got indicted.

The poster children:  Daniel Perry in Austin and Daniel Penny in New York.

Perry was a ride-share driver when he turned into a street in downtown Austin that was blocked by Black Lives Matter rioters.  One approached him with an AK-47 and Perry felt threatened.  He shot the BLM protester dead in what appeared to be self-defense.  Jose Garza indicted him and sent him to prison until Gov. Greg Abbot pardoned him.

Video:  Before the Abbott pardon, Daniel Perry tired to get a new trial

In New York, a former Marine, Daniel Penny put a homeless man in a chokehold after he screamed at passengers that someone was about to die.  Penny didn’t know that, like George Floyd in Minneapolis, this guy was also drugged-up.  Penny didn’t even know that the man had died until after New York police took him in for questioning.  Of course, DA Bragg indicted Perry.

Video:  Judicial bias in the Penny case is charged as the jury deadlocks

Their mistakes were simple.  Perry defended himself instead of waiting to see if the BLM rioter was going to shoot him.   Penny acted to protect people on a subway from a person who was an obvious threat to their safety.  Penny got involved.

What is George Soros’ motive in funding DA candidates that want to coddle criminals?

That’s hard to fathom.  Perhaps Soros feels sorry for them because they’ve had a tough life, probably without a father.  Maybe he believes that too many people of one race are incarcerated, and prisons ought to “look more like America.”  Maybe he’s just not a do-the-crime, do-the-time type of person.

Video: The BBC looks at Soros.

Whatever his reason, he’s loaded with billions, and as a dual citizen of Hungary and America, he can dole out the bucks to get people like Garza and Bragg elected.  An even bigger problem is that the people of Austin and New York, and other big cities are willing to elect these far-left, anti-police candidates.  Note that there was a time when Democrats like Joe Biden ran on a platform of being tough on crime.  Even Kamala Harris bragged about her days as a prosecutor.

But when times and opinions swing in the face of political correctness, big-shot Democrats change with them.  This, of course, exposes the fraud that the Democratic Party is – a party that cares about power rather than any kind of consistent values.

With the election of Donald Trump, the pendulum will swing back in favor of the police and being tougher on crime.  However, cities like Austin are baked in and they will be slow to change.  If you live in a city with a Soros DA, and you see a crime being committed that perhaps you could stop, just let it go.  The Soros DA might just let the criminal walk away, and he might turn his left-wing eyes toward you.  It’s best not to get involved.

Lynn Woolley is a Texas-based author, broadcaster, and songwriter.  Follow his podcast at https://www.PlanetLogic.us.  Check out his author’s page at https://www.Amazon.com/author/lynnwoolley

Order books direct from Lynn at https://PlanetLogicPress.Square.Site

Email Lynn at lwoolley9189@gmail.com.

Of course, you can get involved by ordering copies of this book for everyone on your Christmas list! 

 

A WBDaily Extra – Unsung Davids.  Ten men who battled Goliath without glory.

In 2012, my good friend and former producer Ben Barrack wrote an excellent book about getting involved.  It was about ten men who took on powerful interests just because it was the right think to do.  Ben kindly asked me to write the foreword.  Here is what I wrote:

There was once a time when many people had become cynical.  Some, on the occasion of passing a mugging in progress, opted to look the other way and perhaps walk a little swifter.  The operative phrase of the day was:  “I didn’t want to get involved.”

Unsung Davids by Ben Barrack

How sad for our country when bad people do bad things.  But how much sadder is it when good people know what bad people are doing – and yet choose to do nothing – not to “get involved.”  But what if it’s more than just a simple mugging?  What if there are crooked politicians, terrorists, cults, political parties, movements – yes, even the world!—that cry out to be exposed?  What if nobody stepped up to the plate?

Here are ten instances where somebody did.  In each case, one person, far less powerful than his adversary, stood up to power.  He got involved.

What he didn’t get was any type of tangible support.  Not from the people around him, not from the “authorities,” and certainly not from the Mainstream Media.  These are people who fought the odds with little more than a slingshot while the powerful sat on their hands.

Their stories deserve to be told.

And that’s where Ben Barrack comes in.  If there’s one thing I have learned about Ben in the few years I’ve known him and worked with him it’s this:  When Barrack makes up his mind that’s he’s going to get something accomplished, stay out of his way.  Because he will do it, and he will do it well.

UNSUNG DAVIDS ON AMAZON.COM

Ben comes out of a former career in sales, having been inspired by events around him to do something – to make a difference.  He managed to snag a lonely hour on Sunday morning on a radio station in a medium market.  The audience numbers may have been meager, but Ben used the weekly show to hone his skills.  Soon, he had a website and not long after that, he was writing columns that were strong enough to carried on national websites.  How did he do that?

I was impressed enough that I sought Ben out when I needed a producer for my own show, which runs weekdays on a few radio stations in Texas.  He leapt into the job, savoring the daily routine of talk radio, trolling for breaking stories to put our show on the map, and becoming an accomplished guest host.

Did I say “our” show?  I did, and it was no accident.  No matter whether it’s a slow news day or a day with more in the stack than I can possibly get to – Barack will often find hidden jewels that are more interesting, more entertaining, and often more important than what I was about to cover.  I’ve learned to turn on a dime.

Most of the men covered in this book – the “Davids,” – have been discussed at some length or interviewed on our show.  Sometimes I’ve said, “Barrack!  We can’t do another segment on this story.”  And Ben will invariably say, “But Lynn, this is huge.  There’s new information here that our audience needs to know.”

So I complain (as hosts do to their producers) and go with it.  And after the interview, I say to Barrack, “That wasn’t bad.  That was OK.”  Translation:  that was one heck of a segment, but I’m not going to admit it!

So let me admit something now!  A few months ago, Barrack told me he was writing this book and I was skeptical.  Oh, I knew he could do it.  But having written four books myself (plus one unpublished novel), I know what the commitment is.  When you’re writing a book, you give up your nights and your weekends.  You do the research, you check facts, you plan the chapters, you write and you rewrite.  It’s not for the wishy-washy.

So when Barrack plopped the manuscript on my desk, I can’t say that I was really surprised.  And when I read it, enjoying it not only for the vast array of information he provides, but also for the excellence of style in which it is written – I decided not to be surprised anymore.

Just like the Davids in this book, Ben Barrack is not afraid to get involved.  If this isn’t the best book Ben will ever write, then I can’t wait to see the next one.  I know it will be good and I know it will be about something important.

Lynn Woolley
Radio Talk Show Host
August 27, 2011

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