Revolving Doors

The Westwood area of Winnipeg has long been considered a safe place to go about one’s business, since it is at the edge of the city as opposed to the crime-ridden downtown zone. Not any more, thanks to racially motivated “justice”. If you read up on this guy’s rap sheet in the article, it boggles the mind that he would be allowed anywhere other than prison.

A man shot and killed by Winnipeg police earlier this week was from Nunavut and is being remembered as a proud Inuk who craved connection and needed help to overcome his violent past.

Jordan Charlie, 24, was released from custody in Manitoba on Nov. 19 after he pleaded guilty to assault with a weapon, possessing a weapon for a dangerous purpose and three other related charges for incidents that happened this year, court recordings reviewed by CBC News reveal.

 

11 Replies to “Revolving Doors”

  1. It seems to me that the best thing that could have happened to Mr. Charlie was to keep him remanded in custody, and give him the help he needed, rather than cut him loose where his mental illness would propel him to become a major threat to society in general.
    … but that’s the story of our inept, corrupt, and racially motivate, two-tiered (in)justice system.

  2. He victimized a lot of people in his short life.

    Liberal racists don’t care about victims and neither should you according to them.

    Leftist radicals want violent criminals in your neighborhood causing havoc, it gives them an excuse to hire legions of leftist fellow travelers like lawyers, teachers, police, social workers, bureaucrats of every kind, etc.

    That’s all.

  3. If the two months of no GST on retail goods had been implemented already, a senseless tragedy could have been avoided.

  4. “The Honourable Judge Donald R. Slough (Senior Judge)” gave the violent repeat offender 6 months of time served, releasing him into a community, and in less than 5 days, he attacked another person, and came to what appears to be a justified end.

    How many other violent offenders has Slough released in a similar fashion, and when can we excise “Honourable” from his title?

  5. This young man was stupid and had no self control. There was quite literally no job he could have done that pays so little that he would not do more harm than good. He was going to be a ward of his family or the state for life.

    No amount of counselling, reparations for “inter-generational trauma”, societal support, or anything else is going to make a stupid man intelligent, or is going to make an intemperate man temperate. How many times must one repeat that we cannot fix stupid?

    These men need to be identified young, given something to do by the state to keep them busy, and kept out of contact with regular society. Otherwise they will steal, assault, rape, and kill until they catch a bullet in a parking lot.

    And people of European ancestry have their share of these young men in their midst. But, in general, I don’t tolerate their behavior and have no sympathy when their miserable lives end violently.

  6. I am saddened about this post for a couple of reasons. First, at 24, he should have been full of hope for his future, instead he was depressed and looking for a way out. And second, I am saddened for the many people whom he harmed.
    I do not know the answer, but I still think that a good education is the way forward. Sadly, not all cultures appreciate knowledge. I think it is still extremely “tough” for people like the Inuit to leave behind a stone age culture and be able to embrace modern life. Our father worked a lot in Inuvik and Tuktoyatuk (sp?) in the late 1950’s. He was the general manager and chief electrician for a company specializing in electrical installations in the north. He said that the Eskimos (which is what the Inuit were called 70 years ago) were a good, kind people but almost childlike in their adaption to modern life. In the late 1950’s, they still had traditional knowledge which they passed on to their children. They still used dog sleds, they still used traditional housing and ate traditional foods. They knew how to hunt and provide for themselves for food and for fur trapping. They were able to adapt to using snowmobiles instead of dog sleds for the hunting, but with their nomadic life, it was difficult to give even an elementary education to their children to prepare them for the modern world. Same problem for the other indigenous peoples. Perhaps with satellite internet and cell phones, the next generation will be better prepared. Canada cannot afford to waste these people!

  7. “Three months later, Charlie was riding his bike in the Seven Oaks neigh….”
    Hey, that’s my bike!

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