Soft-on-crime isn’t reform—it’s surrender. When criminals face no risk, victims pay in blood. Keep playing nice, and your city becomes their playground. The bottom line: When punishment disappears, crime multiplies. Cities that protect offenders create victims. Today it’s statistics—tomorrow it’s your street, your family, your life.
Many politicians in America politicians talk like
therapists and criminals move like entrepreneurs, and somewhere in that twisted
exchange, the victim gets edited out of the story like a bad line in a script
nobody wants to read. I am not guessing, I am watching it happen in real time,
from Baltimore to Chicago, from San Francisco to New York City, and what I see
is not reform—it is surrender dressed in a suit and tie.
Let me say it plain, no polish, no perfume: these
“soft-on-crime” policies are not soft, they are sloppy, and sloppy policy
spills blood. Politicians cut police budgets, loosen prosecution, scrap cash
bail, and then stand there blinking when crime doesn’t just rise—it stretches,
yawns, and makes itself comfortable. You don’t declaw a tiger and expect it
to start eating salad, and yet that is exactly the fantasy being sold.
Look at the numbers, because numbers don’t care about
feelings. In Baltimore, homicides hit 348 in 2019, 335 in 2020, 337 in 2021,
and 334 in 2022. That is not a spike. That is a lifestyle. That is a city stuck
in a loop where the body count barely blinks year to year, like it has accepted
the violence as background noise. And while the city bleeds steady, policy
debates drift into language so soft you would think crime was a misunderstood
hobby.
Then I look west to Los Angeles, where $150 million was
shaved off the police budget in 2020, and suddenly the homicide rate jumps by
more than 50% by 2021 compared to 2019. That is not coincidence. That is cause
and effect playing out like a cheap but deadly movie nobody wants to admit they
are starring in. You pull the brakes, and the car still rolls—just faster, just
harder, just straight into the wall.
And then there is San Francisco, the city that decided to
treat theft like a minor inconvenience, like someone forgetting to pay for gum.
The result? Stores closing, shelves empty, products locked behind glass like
museum artifacts. When a city makes stealing low-risk, stealing becomes
high-frequency. That is not ideology. That is math. When the price of crime
drops, demand shoots up. Even a street hustler understands supply and
demand better than some of these policymakers.
Now let us talk about bail reform, because that one is
sold like a miracle cure. In New York City, the 2019 bail reform laws wiped out
cash bail for many non-violent crimes, and suddenly the revolving door started
spinning like a casino wheel. Data showed that a small percentage of repeat
offenders were responsible for a massive share of crimes, with about 20% of
individuals linked to nearly 60% of repeat offenses. That is not a glitch in
the system. That is the system.
And here is the punchline nobody wants to say out loud:
when you keep releasing the same offenders, you are not giving them a second
chance—you are giving the public a second risk. And a third. And a fourth. At
some point, mercy stops being mercy and starts looking like neglect.
Take Washington, D.C., where homicides jumped more than
35% in 2023. Carjackings surged. People were not debating theory anymore. They
were timing how fast they could get from their front door to their car without
becoming a statistic. That is what “reform” looks like on the ground. Not
speeches. Not panels. Fear. And fear spreads faster than policy ever will.
What frustrates me is not just the crime. It is the
upside-down morality of it all. I hear officials talk about protecting
offenders from harsh systems, but I rarely hear the same urgency when it comes
to protecting victims from being created in the first place. It is like
watching a referee step in—not to stop the fight—but to make sure the puncher
feels emotionally supported while the person getting hit is told to stay
patient.
That is not justice. That is performance. Let me
be blunt: when prosecutors decline to charge low-level crimes, they are not
removing crime—they are rebranding it. When police are told to pull back,
criminals do not step back—they step forward. When repeat offenders face little
consequence, they do not reform—they refine. Crime evolves. It studies the
rules. It adapts faster than the system trying to contain it. I have seen
videos out of San Francisco where groups walk into stores, grab what they want,
and leave without a hint of panic. No rush. No fear. Just rhythm. Like they are
clocking in for work. That is not desperation. That is confidence. Confidence
built on policy.
And here is the part that hits hardest: the people
pushing these policies rarely live with the consequences. They do not ride the
late-night buses. They do not close their stores at midnight wondering if
tonight is the night everything goes wrong. They do not stand at gas stations
scanning every face like it might be trouble.
But regular people do. Every day.
The single mother in Baltimore who does not let her kids
play outside after sunset is not thinking about criminal justice reform theory.
She is thinking about survival. The shop owner in Chicago who boards up his
windows is not debating equity. He is calculating loss. The rideshare driver in
Los Angeles is not reading policy briefs. He is watching his rearview mirror.
This is where the satire writes itself, because the
system has become a strange joke with no punchline. We punish the law-abiding
with fear, and we reward the law-breaking with leniency, and then we act
confused when the wrong people feel empowered. If you water weeds and starve
flowers, do not act surprised when the garden turns ugly.
I am not arguing for brutality. I am arguing for balance.
I am not saying the old system was perfect. I am saying this new one is failing
in plain sight. There is a difference between reform and retreat, and right
now, too many cities have chosen retreat.
History already ran this experiment once. In the 1990s,
aggressive policing strategies in New York City drove homicides down from 2,245
in 1990 to 673 by 2000. That drop did not happen because criminals suddenly
found enlightenment. It happened because the system made crime risky again.
Risk is the language crime understands. Remove it, and crime speaks louder.
Right now, in too many places, crime is screaming. And
here is the final truth, the one that cuts through all the noise: when cities
go soft on crime, they are not being kind—they are being careless. They are
shifting the burden from the offender to the victim, from the guilty to the
innocent, from the few who break the law to the many who try to live by it. And
that shift is not theoretical. It is paid in funerals, in shuttered businesses,
in neighborhoods that learn to live with less hope and more caution.
I do not need a politician to explain this to me. I can
see it. I can hear it. I can feel it.
And if we keep pretending that this is compassion, then
we are not just lying to ourselves—we are writing the next victim’s story
before it even happens.
This article stands on
its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book
Series”. Read it here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.






