Biden Gives Christmas Gift to Vicious Murderers, Commutes Sentences of Nearly Every Death Row Inmate

Biden Gives Christmas Gift to Vicious Murderers, Commutes Sentences of Nearly Every Death Row Inmate

Reasonable people may hold differing opinions on whether capital punishment serves justice and the public interest better than life imprisonment.

However, it’s hard to deny that President Joe Biden lacks the moral clarity and cognitive aptitude to make such profound decisions.

On Monday, the White House announced that Biden had commuted the sentences of 37 of the 40 inmates on federal death row, including individuals convicted of heinous crimes such as carjacking, kidnapping, and murder.

“Those individuals will have their sentences reclassified from execution to life without the possibility of parole,” the statement read.

Predictably, the White House released only a list of those whose sentences were commuted, including their names and registration numbers, without offering details about the crimes they committed.

Unsurprisingly, the administration avoided publicizing the nature of those offenses or providing any information about the victims of these crimes.

Fortunately, Fox News filled in some of the gaps the White House omitted. Among the victims were a woman kidnapped and killed by escapees Brandon Basham and Chadrick Fulks, a 12-year-old girl kidnapped and murdered by Thomas Sanders, a prison guard killed by Anthony Battle, a special-duty police officer fatally shot by Daryl Lawrence during a bank robbery, and two bank employees murdered by Brandon Council.

The victims, tragically, had no voice in Biden’s decisions to commute these sentences.

Even more troubling than the commutations themselves was the president’s reasoning behind them.

“He believes that America must stop the use of the death penalty at the federal level,” the White House statement explained, “except in cases of terrorism and hate-motivated mass murder — which is why today’s actions apply to all but those cases.”

In Biden’s view, kidnapping and murdering a child doesn’t warrant capital punishment. Yet, according to his logic, if a crime is fueled by hatred, such as targeting individuals based on race, religion, or ethnicity, then the death penalty remains appropriate.

In essence, this reasoning underscores how deeply “wokeness” has influenced the president’s approach to justice.

“The President’s criminal justice record has transformed individual lives and positively impacted communities, especially historically marginalized communities,” the statement proclaimed.

According to Fox News, only three federal death row inmates were excluded from Biden’s mercy: Robert Bowers, who murdered 11 worshippers at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018; Dylann Roof, who killed nine Black parishioners at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston in 2015; and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, one of the orchestrators of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing that killed three and injured hundreds.

For those who still believe in justice, Biden’s decision to commute these sentences is deeply unsettling.

This is especially poignant considering that, in February, special counsel Robert Hur declared Biden mentally unfit to face charges related to mishandling classified documents.

By July, even Democratic Party leaders publicly expressed doubts about Biden’s ability to seek re-election.

Reports also indicate that Biden’s staff has spent over four years managing and compensating for his cognitive decline.

And yet, despite these circumstances, the president has been entrusted with making decisions about life and death.

Thankfully, the spectacle of a cognitively diminished Biden making unilateral decisions about crime and punishment, while those around him enable the charade, will soon conclude. His term is set to end in less than a month, offering a glimmer of relief.

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