When it comes to criminal justice, it is well known that George Soros favors rehabilitating criminals instead of jailing them. He has made this philosophy a staple of his campaign donations. District attorneys throughout the country that favor rehabilitation have all benefited from millions of dollars in campaign donations from Soros. Judging by the actions of a character in the latest Spider-man movie, Soros could have funded this latest prodigy.
In Spider-man: No Way Home, a major plot point focuses on Peter Parker, Spider-man’s alter ego, implementing Soros’s vision. He diligently works to rehabilitate every villain in the movie. He thinks they can all be cured of their evil ways. His approach is so left-wing one wonders if Soros, not Tony Stark, is funding Peter Parker.
Imagine a world in which your friendly, neighborhood Soros-candidate is slinging legislation that puts criminals on the street instead of slinging webs to fight crime. Imagine a world in which Spider-man’s greatest foes weren’t held accountable for their crimes but rather set free to reoffend. In those instances, fiction would mirror the reality of the cities plagued with the incompetence of Soros-backed DAs. The friendly, neighborhood Soros-candidate would have to deal with the carnage of his failed criminal justice initiatives and go after the criminals again — as is happening in cities across the country.
Not to give too much away, but Spider-man learns his lesson the hard way in the movie. With the exception of one villain, the majority of them manipulate the hero’s mercy to their advantage and continue their evil ways. And a pretty big character dies as a result.
There is a time for leniency and mercy. However, there is also a time for accountability. Being a dangerous criminal is a choice. Holding such people accountable for their crimes is a necessary element of preventing further crime — whether on the movie screen or the streets of some of the country’s biggest cities.