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On Labor Day weekend in 2025, Chicago After another gun violence, at least nine people died and 52 were injured. The victims spanned all ages, from 18-year-old Morgan Alaniz shooting near a small village to a 63-year-old man, lifeless from the dazzling port. Most of these shootings occurred in communities that were mainly black and Latino, but the public’s response to the massacre was significantly conquered.
Activists and organizers, including Black Lives Matter, have mobilized protests nationwide in 2020 George Floyd’s Death – Asking for justice and systemic change in the name of black life – Stay silent. They have not expressed empathy or solidarity for victims of violence.
Instead, these same activists – self-proclaimed American conscience – rally in the streets of Chicago, protesting against the president Donald Trump’s It is proposed to deploy the National Guard to stop violence.
Trump clashed with reporters after the Chicago “War” meme: “That’s not war, that’s common sense’
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson These protesters opposed the idea, constructing it as an infringement of local sovereignty and invoking historical dissatisfaction. He shouted, “Are you ready to defend the land built by slaves, which is the land built by the indigenous peoples?”

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson called protesters against the deployment of the National Guard, saying it was an infringement of local sovereignty and invoking historical dissatisfaction. (Getty Image/Kamil Krazaczynski)
As filmmaker Eli Steele observed in his post on X: “After the Labor Day Holocaust in Chicago, @chicagomayor chose racial politics as his power. That’s the problem: the power of race can only reward its exploiters and fails to solve real-world problems. Since the 1960s, we have failed with this systemic failure. How many deaths are there.
Steele’s criticism points to a deeper problem: Racial narratives take precedence over pragmatic solutions. This selective anger is nothing new. In the summer of 2020, the death of Floyd, a white policeman, sparked widespread activism, with millions of flags marching under banners claiming “Black Lives Matter.” However, silence is deafening when violence claims that black people live in the hands of other black people.
From Chicago Police Department It has been consistently shown that over 80% of the city’s homicide victims and criminals are black. As Steele suggests, the difference in response stems from the racial dynamics that work: one situation fits the narrative of white authority on systemic oppression, while the other is not.
Our leaders gave up on Chicago. Trump is right: It’s time to call the guard
One of the reasons I’ve been walking around the United States is to fight this disturbing alliance of black elites and white liberals, who are apart from leveraging their racial identities to achieve political power. We have been doing this since the civil rights era in the 1960s.
How long will we delay the power of race ideologically?
How many more bodies will we see?
For us, the only answer is to live in reality and see things real.
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I don’t like the idea of Chicago federal intervention because I’m a real little government conservative. But when the mother of a dead child asked me, “When will this stop?” I was tired of telling her that one day would happen.
I am very proud of the work my Project Hood Violent Impact Team did on the streets of my south side community, but I had long known that one died too much.
If the intervention of external military forces is needed, the most important thing is to arrest the criminal, so that’s it. The worst option is to listen to Illinois Gov. Johnson Mayor JB Pritzker and protesters on the street who continue to do nothing without having to take racial game tricks that will only lead to more deaths.
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We no longer afford the greed of the black political elite or the delusion of the white liberals. Chicago residents from small villages to Brondsville deserve solutions based on fact and reality, not rhetoric.
Locking offenders – Until then, the city was able to transcend the tragedy of the weekend and towards a safer future for all.
Click here to learn more about Rev. Cory Brooks