The Shorter MNDFL

“ The rule of law has collapsed so badly in a city we used to proudly brag about “owning“ that crime flourishes openly and without fear in the streets“

“And if you don’t accept an invitation to come see this collapse face-to-face, it is you who is the problem!”

20 thoughts on “The Shorter MNDFL

  1. Somehow, I’m doubting that Schultz declined such an invitation. I don’t think Ellison even knows where North Minneapolis is.

  2. The people of MN believe that the biggest problem in law enforcement is street crime & gangs. Keith Ellison believes the biggest problem in MN law enforcement is too many black people are arrested and jailed.
    You can’t square that circle. If Ellison is re-elected he is not going to work harder to put more street criminals and gang bangers in jail.
    Ellison’s remarks last week threatening shop keepers is straight out of the Farrakhan play book. If blacks commit a crime at a business, you arrest the white or Jewish business owner, not the black criminal. If a building is operated as a drug den, you prosecute the white or Jewish owner of the building, not the drug dealers who are working out of it.
    This is so obvious I shouldn’t have to explain this to anyone.

  3. when i lived in midway, low income shoppers rode teh bus to target midway, pushed the shopping cart of purchases to the bus stop, abandoned the cart there to ride the bus home. some pushed the carts to their residences and left them on the curb blocks away.

    city threatened to punish target for causing neighborhood pollution, all those damned shopping carts

    now the cart wheels lock at the edge ofthe parking lot and poor people carry their thin plastic sacks to the light rail

    problem solved

  4. If Ellison wins again, he will win on the same anti-bail, anti-jail platform he ran in 2018, and it is crime-ridden HennCo voters that will put him over the top.

  5. Here are Hakim’s Priorities per his webby:

    “It’s my job as Attorney General job to help Minnesotans afford their lives in the face of the rising costs of prescription drugs, healthcare, and higher education; declining wages and purchasing. power; scams, unscrupulous landlords, and pandemic profiteering; and fraud, deception, and antitrust practices by corporations.”

    Here’s what the MN Constitution says Hakim’s job is. “Helping citizens to afford their lives” isn’t in there:

    “The Attorney General of Minnesota is the chief legal officer for the State of Minnesota. The office of the attorney general represents and provides legal advice to over 100 state agencies, boards and commissions.”

    Hakim isn’t afraid to highlight where he got his ass kicked:

    “I’m proud to join attorneys general from around the country in fighting the unconstitutional laws from Texas and Mississippi at the U.S. Supreme Court and fighting to uphold Roe vs. Wade against orchestrated right-wing attacks.”

    Hakim says he’s harsh on haters…

    “It’s my job as attorney general to help people live with dignity, safety, and respect. This means fighting hate and standing up for civil and human rights for everyone — no exceptions.”

    I checked to see what harsh response he had for John Thompson when Thompson hung</strike lynched a White women in effigy, in her driveway, while screaming racist hate, threatening arson and violence against White people….guess he made an exception.

    Hakim touts one thing he did do, that was both within his authority and responsibility; he prosecuted several people for Medicare fraud, including a gang of black scammers. Wonder what they did to him?

  6. I checked to see what harsh response he had for John Thompson when Thompson hung lynched a White women in effigy, in her driveway, while screaming racist hate, threatening arson and violence against White people….guess he made an exception.

    Hakim touts one thing he did do, that was both within his authority and responsibility; he prosecuted several people for Medicare fraud, including a gang of black scammers. Wonder what they did to him?

  7. What is the job of the Attorney General? It is to represent the State civilly. Prosecution of crime is the responsibility of County attorneys. AG Ellison has been pushing for more prosecutors to assist county attorneys. It’s the senate GOP that didn’t agree to fund those prosecutors. But those would be actual facts that don’t fit the narrative and so thus are unusable.

  8. ^ It’s the senate GOP that didn’t agree to fund those prosecutors

    The senate GOP cancelled all funding? Like down to zero?

  9. Look at rAT go!

    Now he’s supporting black supremacists who beat the shit out of White women.

    Keep going, rAT! You’re doing great!

  10. civilly
    chauvin

    either hakim doesnt know his job or you dont

    or maybe i should embrace the healing power of and

  11. ^^ County attorneys prosecute felonies, City attorneys prosecute misdemeanors. The AG can provide support when asked.

    When the incumbent has less that 50% support, it means the voters are ready to change things. If Ellison is tied with Schultz in the polls, he’s losing by 4%.

  12. ^^ Picking Schultz, who has never stepped foot in a courtroom, is like picking a surgeon who has never stepped foot in an operating room.

  13. nice try but you cant lie your way out of this one i was here for the fiasco i remember how it went down hakim di dnot assist he took over completely and then passed off to outside night riders the day to day details of the lynching

    https://www.politico.com/news/2021/04/22/keith-ellison-derek-chauvin-484362

    waiting for hakim to take on the hoods from the hood causing crime all over the metro but not holding my breath cuz hes a fraud and aliar just like all liberals

  14. “Picking Schultz, who has never stepped foot in a Nation of Islam Temple, and never battered a woman, is like picking a NIH Director who has never lied to Congress.”

    FTFY, Smug!

  15. OK, the thing that baffles me is that the DFL is bragging about inviting someone to….one of the biggest open air drug bazaars in the city, and then they’re acting surprised that someone decided not to go. It is as if somebody invited my new pastor to the local whorehouse “so he could see the consequences of sin up close”.

    Um, maybe instead of visiting the “den of vice”, and inviting people to do the same, maybe we could….say….shut it down? Am I too weird for suggesting that?

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