Disagree, if you want.
Q: What are the difference in the odds of back and white races murdering each other according to FBI statistics?
Grok:
The rate of black offenders murdering white victims was about 1.28 per 100,000 black population.
The rate of white offenders murdering black victims was about 0.098 per 100,000 white population.
This means black individuals were roughly 13 times more likely to murder a white individual than white individuals were to murder a black individual, on a per capita basis.
Democrats and crime go together like a horse and carriage.
It is our job to make them both quaint memories.
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🏛️ Why Politicians Don’t Want to Solve Problems
Here’s a theory I’ve been thinking about — and the more I look at the world, the more it seems to hold up:
Politicians don’t actually want to solve problems.
Because there’s more money, power, and influence to be gained in keeping those problems alive — especially in times of chaos and fear.
Let me explain.
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💰 Crisis Means Cash
Every time a major problem surfaces — whether it’s war, climate change, crime, or public health — billions of dollars get thrown at it. Committees are formed. Programs are launched. Studies are commissioned.
It looks like action, but too often it’s just theater. Behind the scenes, that money flows into the hands of consultants, contractors, nonprofits, and corporations with political connections. In many cases, these programs never actually fix anything.
Why would they? If the problem goes away, so does the funding.
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😨 Fear Justifies Control
Fear is one of the most effective tools in a politician’s toolbox. When people are afraid, they’re more willing to:
• Accept surveillance or censorship “for their safety”
• Support emergency powers “for the public good”
• Vote for politicians who promise to “fix it”
Once those powers are in place, they rarely go away — even after the crisis has passed.
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🗳️ The Perks of Perpetual Problems
If you solve a problem, you lose a campaign talking point.
But if you keep a problem just bad enough, you can keep saying:
“We’re working on it — just give us more time, more power, and more money.”
It’s a great way to get re-elected without ever delivering results.
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🧾 Follow the Money
Most government programs are complicated — by design. That complexity makes it easy to hide waste, corruption, and “skimming off the top.”
The bigger the problem, the more layers of bureaucracy. The more layers, the more opportunities to quietly redirect funds to friends, donors, or pet causes.
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😇 Is Every Politician Corrupt?
No, not all of them. There are honest public servants out there. But the system itself is built in a way that often rewards dysfunction more than results. Even well-meaning politicians can get caught in the machine.
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🤔 Final Thought
This isn’t about left vs. right. It’s about how power thrives in chaos — and how solving problems can be bad for business in the political world.
So no — you’re not wrong to be skeptical. In fact, we should probably be more skeptical.
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