How US society has fundamentally transformed when illegals randomly execute citizens
By now you have all heard the horrific news that a young woman in San Francisco named Kathryn Steinle was executed, seemingly at random for no reason, by an illegal alien named Francisco Sanchez. Sanchez, who had been deported five times and had seven felony convictions, was released by San Francisco police on March 26th after being arrested on a drug charge. The police and ICE are each pointing fingers at each other, but in fact both are complicit in dropping the ball and letting these foreign killers roam freely.
When Kathryn Steinle was killed, she wasn't killed walking in the Tenderloin or one of San Francisco's notoriously dangerous neighborhoods; she was in a very well travelled tourist area around the Ferry Building, near the Embarcadero. Steinle also wasn't walking in the middle of the night; it was only 6:30 PM and bright and sunny as it is in the summer. She also had no connection to Sanchez. In other words, she hadn't done anything "wrong" or even risky, but simply lived her life as a normal person would. Her only "mistake" was walking in what she thought was one of the safest parts of San Francisco at the same time as Sanchez, when in reality there are no safe areas. This "mistake" cost her her life.
All the conservative blogs will talk about the obvious folly of the illegal alien invasion here, but I want to talk about something different; how all these waves of illegal aliens have changed our society. ...