The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Wednesday, October 16, 2024
Episode Date: October 16, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 12:39)The Parable of George Gascón: Soft-On-Crime D.A. in LA Faces Looming Disaster of His Own Mak...ing on Election DayGascón gave teen killer second chance — now she’s charged again by The LA Times (Richard Winton and James Queally)‘Not even close’: Hochman’s lead over Gascón grows to 30% in new D.A.’s race poll by The LA Times (Connor Sheets and James Queally)Part II (12:39 - 17:12)It’s a Coastal Crisis With Big Warning Signs ‘Hopelessly Woke Legislators’ Have Crushed Major U.S. CitiesProgressives have destroyed the great cities of coastal America by The Telegraph (Zoe Strimpel)Part III (17:12 - 20:27)The Parable of Chicago’s Mayor: Entire School Board of Chicago Resigns in the Wake of Brandon Johnson Pandering to Teacher UnionsPart IV (20:27 - 26:18)From the Puritans to Magic Mushrooms? Massachusetts Weighs Legalization of Psychedelic MushroomsLegalize Magic Mushrooms? Massachusetts Should Just Vote No by The Wall Street Journal (Charles Fain Lehman)Limited Legalization and Regulation of Certain Natural Psychedelic Substances by Secretary of the Commonwealth of MassachusettsSign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
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It's Wednesday, October 16, 2024. I'm Albert Moeller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
The issue of crime and punishment is one of the most dramatic storylines in all of human history. It fills our literature, but it also fills our headlines.
And that's because we live in a fallen world, and thus crime and punishment are absolutely relevant issues.
They're also controversial issues, and this is playing right into the 2024 campaign cycle.
And that's because as you look at a couple of developments in the state of California, there are similar developments elsewhere.
But the fact that this is happening, these two things in California, it should certainly have our attention.
For one thing, you have the voters of California going to the ballot box on Election Day in order to decide whether or not they are going to basically revoke a proposition the voters put in place in 2014.
That George Soros-backed initiative was calling for a liberalization of crime laws.
Basically, you're looking at the question of crime and punishment, you decide that the crime is no longer worth or demanding of a more severe punishment.
And so you adopt a more lenient understanding of the law.
Prosecutors, judges, and others have to buy into this, but it is made particularly lawful when you have an initiative such as what was passed in California in 2014.
It was known then as Proposition 47.
Well, guess what?
Here's a big surprise.
It has been a disaster.
You look at all kinds of categories of crime.
guess what? You have more criminals. And so even as you had that movement back in 2014
arguing that society had overcrowded jails and all the rest, it turns out that once people
understand that this leads to rising crime, they say, you know, we want the stricter laws back.
As a result of the passage of Proposition 47 back in 2014, as the Wall Street Journal says,
what increased was vagrancy, open-air drug use, and mental illness, quote, organized crime
ring, plunder stores, and freight trains with impunity. On October the 4th, two dozen people ransacked a Nordstrom
store west of Los Angeles that had been looted by another crew of mass thieves in August 223. This article
which is actually an editorial column in the Wall Street Journal says, quote, violent crime has
surged by some 35 percent since 2014, about four times as much as nationwide, end quote.
Now, crime has been going up around the country, including violent crime. Now, this requires a bit of
explanation because maybe you're hearing, particularly among those who designate themselves as fact
checkers in the media and in the public square, they say that's not true. Look at the FBI statistics.
Yeah, well, the FBI statistics, the FBI will have to answer for. But the fact is, there are many
in Congress who are saying that the FBI has recategorized some issues so that they no longer count
the way they once counted, which means it can look like violent crime is down. But you know what?
The impression of Americans is not that. Americans do not believe that,
crime, including violent crime, is down. And thus you have a statistic like this, just looking at
the state of California since 2014, violent crime up 35%. Okay, that's very significant. So what's also
significant is that voters in California have the power to rescind Proposition 47 adopted in 2014
by adopting Proposition 36 in November. So it's not so much that one proposition is repealed as much
is a corrective proposition citizen action will be put into place. And it has binding authority.
If Proposition 36 passes shoplifters with two or more past convictions, well, their charge could be
upgraded to a felony. And furthermore, you could have all kinds of sentences that are now
increased rather than decreased, particularly as is related to organized crime. And that would
include drug trafficking and any number of other crimes. Now, here's what's interesting. The
Street Journal editorial board said that just last week, the University of California at Berkeley
Institute of Governmental Studies released a poll that showed voters favor Proposition 36. Now get this
by a three to one margin. That is three to one. We're not talking about overwhelming. We're not
talking about a mere majority. We're talking about what amounts to a landslide here. You're talking
three to one. These are the same voters, at least in some sense. They are the same voting population
that, well, at least those who were voting back in 2014,
voted for the previous initiative.
So you might say that this has to be put in the category of lesson learned.
So somehow, a significant number, an adequate number of Californians
were convinced in 2014 that the law was too strict,
but now they are running as fast as possible to correct that action
with a radical imbalance here.
Again, three to one, this initiative appears to be in the lead.
But it's not only this citizen initiative, this proposition, it is also a question that will be faced by the citizens of Los Angeles County, where L.A. County District Attorney George Gascon is up for re-election. Okay, very interesting story here. You go back to the original election of George Gascon. He was elected as a liberal prosecutor. Now, in one sense, those two words don't go together. There's something of an oxymoron in technical terms. Liberal prosecutor just really doesn't make sense.
However, we're talking about California.
This isn't limited, by the way, to California.
It is extended mostly throughout the entire West Coast,
add Oregon and add Washington State to this.
And there are some eastern jurisdictions, though fewer,
tempted by the same kind of move.
Let's liberalize the prosecution office.
Let's elect a liberal prosecutor who is running on a platform
of prosecuting fewer criminals.
Well, let's just ask the question.
How is that turned out?
I think you already know the answer.
It has turned out so badly for this liberal district attorney there in Los Angeles County that he is running behind by 30 points against a conservative challenger.
So once again, you have voters, the same voters, facing a question, and what looked good to them just a few years ago is not looking so good now.
Now here's what's really interesting.
You have the liberal press, such as the Los Angeles Times, which, by the way, has endorsed George Gascon for re-election.
So the Los Angeles Times is saying, we need to put this man back in office.
even though all of these problems have appeared and his liberal approach to prosecution hasn't worked.
We need to put him back because we need to continue this experiment a bit longer.
But this is where citizens really don't want to be lab rats in some kind of laboratory experiment.
And when you look at how liberal politicians look at the political structure, that's often exactly how they see it.
The voters in Los Angeles, at least those who are polled by this Berkeley organization, the University of California,
they go on to say that once again they are expected to elect the challenger to George Gascon by a 30-point margin.
And at this point, just three weeks before the election, a 30-point difference between support for the two candidates is almost by definition impossible to overcome.
And so one political scientist looking at this situation in California said, if George Gascon pulls this out, you're going to be talking about this election to your grandchildren.
One of my favorite parts about the Los Angeles Times coverage on this is that looking at this different.
and basically trying to argue that the voters are unfair in making this judgment.
One of the reports cites Roy Baer identified as a political consultant for multiple Democrat campaigns across California.
Now, here's what he said about the voters.
Quote, voters don't know data. What they know are anecdotes.
And over the last four years, there have been a massive number of televised anecdotes with store break-ins or other violent acts that have created the perception of crime run amok.
End quote.
Now, why do I think that's so important? I think it's important because there you have an academic saying, you know, the people really don't know when crime's going up or down. They should not trust their instincts. They should not trust their moral perception. They should not trust even, you might say, their own eyes and their own ears when it comes to understanding crime statistics. This is an unfair issue, at least that's implied, according to this consultant. But I want to turn to an actual example of why the voters in Los Angeles County are turning on their district attorney.
And once again, all I have to do is look at the Los Angeles Times, the hometown newspaper.
A pair of reporters for that newspaper reports with a headline, quote,
Gascon gave teen killer a second chance, and now she's charged again.
So let's just look at the story. Here it is. As reported in the Los Angeles Times,
October the 3rd, 2004, and I quote,
The crime, Shanice Amanda Dyer, committed as a 17-year-old, was as horrific as it was seemingly
random. She was a documented member of a Cripps that's a gang.
Cripps Street Gang faction in South L.A., according to appellate records in the case,
and she wanted to help retaliate for killings by a rival group in August 2019.
Quote, the targets the gang chose at random were an expectant father Alfredo Carrera
and his close friend Jose Antonio Flores Vasquez, an aspiring astrophysicist in UC
that's University of California, Irvine's doctorate program, who is visiting Carrera to drop off
a baby gift, end quote. Okay, there's a lot of words, but you get the picture. This man is dropping off
a baby gift. Quote, a car pulled up with Dyer inside. After a brief argument, authority said
Dyer and two other defendants unleashed a volley of gunfire killing both men. A third man down the
street was wounded in the back as he loaded his one-year-old daughter into a car seat.
End quote. Now get this. This is just further from the report. This is the young woman who was
charged. According to the article, she quote, sent text messages, taking responsibility for the
shooting, saying she was satisfied it made headlines according to a court of appeals filing
that documented evidence gathered from her Instagram account.
End quote.
So we're talking here about open boasts about committing murder made by a teenage gang member
and posted on social media for everyone to see.
We then read, quote, Dyer was tried as a juvenile under Los Angeles County District Attorney
George Gascon, who at the time had a strict policy against prosecuting teens as adults.
She admitted to the murder charges in 2021 and probation records reviewed by the Times show she
was released last February. Six months later, she was arrested in connection with another homicide,
this one in Ramona. End quote. Now, just so you understand, the Los Angeles Times doesn't
miss the point. Here are the next words. Quote, Dyer's case is one of several in which a defendant
to whom Gascon showed leniency has been released only to be accused of another violent crime.
End quote. And so here you have a documented case of a prosecutor who decided not to try this older
teenager of multiple murders as an adult, but rather to enter prosecution only under the juvenile system.
That's a reflection of leniency in a way that I think is absolutely without any rational
basis. And it turns out that this young woman, because she was tried as a juvenile on murder
charges, she was found guilty. And yet she's back on the streets. And guess what? Within six months,
she is back in connection with another murder. But in another telling development, a major ad buy in the
campaign against the incumbent liberal district attorney. It has been undertaken by a group known as
the Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs. And as the paper says, it is a union for deputy
sheriffs and district attorney investigators in the county. You think that's a coincidence?
I'll just say this. I don't think you have to be a very good investigator to say, I think not.
All right. So in worldview terms, what do we learn from this? Well, one of the things we need to learn is that
is God gave responsibility to civil government. And that's really clear. A passage like Romans 13 in the
New Testament makes that very clear. We are told, for example, that the government, in this case,
the emperor does not hold or wield the sword in vain. And that's about justice. That's what the
power of the sword is there. It's about more than justice. It could be even in terms of, say,
military service. But most importantly, it is a reference to justice, the responsibility which God
gave to human government to limit evil and to prosecute wrongdoing.
Crime and punishment is such an abundant theme throughout human literature and, of course,
even on television, movies, and all the rest, precisely because it is an inescapable fact
of life and it is one of the most revealing moral issues of any civilization at any time until
Jesus comes. It's also interesting to see that people from elsewhere are noting what's going on
in the United States. The Telegraph is one of the most of the most of the United States. The Telegraph is one of the
influential British newspapers. How do you like this for a headline, quote,
progressives have destroyed the great cities of coastal America? In the article, this writer
telling the British readership about what's going on in the United States says that America's
coastal cities have gone through cycles of change. And she says, one of the reasons that these
coastal cities became more attractive to people in recent decades was that at least
decades ago, they adopted, quote, a much tougher approach to crime. And she says,
says those tougher approaches, quote, turn the likes of New York and San Francisco into
beacons of desirability, end quote. And that's exactly what happened. But this is where she writes.
She says, but years of democratic rule have destroyed the likes of New York and San Francisco,
turning them into dystopias of anarchy, jamborees of unpunished violence, theft, and vandalism.
Later, she writes, quote, meanwhile in San Francisco, the crime, shoplifting, open drug taking,
homelessness and tent encampments that might once have been the necessary downside of a famously
progressive dynamic city have consumed it, end quote. And this particular writer understands that
someone's responsible for this, and thus in the next sentence, she writes, quote, there too, the problem is
hopelessly woke legislators, end quote. Now, every word in that sentence is important, but I think the two
words put together hopelessly woke means a lot. But remember, the next word is legislators, and
legislators are elected. So this is where voters have to understand that the election of legislators,
politicians, those who will hold political office at every level turns out cumulatively to be very important.
Sometimes singularly it can be very important, as when you're looking at someone like the Los Angeles
County District Attorney. But when it comes to the formation of the laws and the operation of government,
those elected legislators at every level, they turn out to be very, very important, particularly
when you consider which side, which argument has the majority. We've also tracked on the briefing
the fact that in some jurisdictions, voters had actually chosen more lenient laws, very permissive
laws concerning drug use, but in many of those, if not all those cases, they're now reversing
or trying to reverse those decisions. As Natalie Ferdig of Politico tells us, she just reminds us
that back in 2020, you had in Portland, Oregon, the passage of what was known as Measure
110, quote, decriminalizing all drugs, which was backed by 74% of MoMA County's residents,
quote, voters couldn't or at least didn't anticipate how this policy change would reshape a city
already strapped for money, dealing with a public health crisis and confronting rising rates of
homelessness and fentanyl abuse, end quote. The bottom line, by the way, is, quote, drug use shot up,
homelessness worsened, and taxpayers fled, end quote. Well, once again, as Christians,
look at this. We need to recognize that the law has.
the function of restraining evil. The law has the function biblically given of punishing the
evildoer, and the law also has the biblical function of teaching. So all three of those functions
turn out to be important. And if you make drug use, just normalize it by permissive legislation.
Guess what more people do it? And if it's a problem, then you are buying a bigger problem
by telling people there's no problem using it. Now, as you look at the sociological data,
clear that sometimes there are disproportionate impacts in certain communities, even certain ethnic
designations when it comes to the prosecutions. But you also understand that it's some of the
people in those same communities who are crying out saying this isn't working because they're
paying the price of these liberal or woke policies. But you know, it is interesting just when we
consider what we often talk about here, and that is the fact that progressivist policies
become thicker on the ground, the closer you get to a city, the closer you get to a coast, the
closer you get to a campus, it's not an accident that this headline in the British newspaper
was, progressives have destroyed the great cities of coastal America. Now, clearly not all of them,
but disproportionately on the coasts. And it's true on the right coast and it's true on the left
coast. It's true on the Atlantic coast is true on the Pacific coast. The closer you get to the
coast, it is just a fact of life that in many cases you get closer to a more progressive vote.
and you get closer to progressive ideas.
But frankly, as we're thinking about this problem, we actually need to go to another city.
This one is not on a sea coast, but it is a major political factor in the United States
and actually with world significance, and that is the city of Chicago.
A very interesting parable.
A tale is unfolding.
A morality story is unfolding there in the city of Chicago.
The liberal mayor there is the Democrat Brandon Johnson, and he is very liberal.
And you are talking in the city of Chicago, pretty much like you're talking about the state of California, it is a Democratic Party enclave.
The Democratic Party basically has a monopoly on political power.
And in this case, what's interesting is what's happening within that circle.
And within that circle, the interesting development in recent days is the fact that in protest of the liberal mayor, the entire school board has, wait for it, resigned.
Not some of them.
Not one of them.
All of them.
why are they resigning? Well, it is because the mayor is completely sold out to the liberal
teachers unions. Now, in one sense, liberal teachers unions is another form of a redundancy. You just
don't need to say liberal teachers unions. If you have teachers unions in the United States,
they are overwhelmingly liberal. And frankly, it's hard to exaggerate that. And if you doubt what
I'm saying, simply look up the website to some of these teachers unions and see the positions
they are demanding, not only advocating, but demanding. And in the city of Chicago, which is
a failing school district. Now, no doubt, let's concede it has grave challenges, but it is a failing
school district. I mean failing virtually in every conceivable way. And the teachers are demanding
a massive pay raise that's going to require a $300 million high interest loan to a broke school
district. $300 million. That's why the school board resigned all of them, the entire board.
All right. So at this point, even the very liberal city council in Chicago has indicated,
its outrage at this showdown and the fact that the entire school board has resigned in protest.
But get this, here's the way politics works in Chicago.
Guess who gets to appoint the entire new school board?
Oh, you got it.
The very liberal mayor who caused the problem in the first place.
He gets to appoint a new school board.
And guess what?
By coincidence, they're going to agree with him.
But you know what won't go away?
Well, it's the problems there in the Chicago City schools.
You know, what else won't go away?
The money problem.
and what also appears not to go away virtually anywhere where you have this kind of conflict is the political power of the teachers unions.
And I just want to point out it is disproportionately allocated.
So these teacher unions do not have much influence in the Republican Party because they don't have anything to do with the Republican Party.
But they are largely in the driver's seat in the Democratic Party.
One recent Democratic National Convention, it was estimated that three out of four of those who were delegates to the convention were either members of a teacher,
union or directly in their family related to a member of the teachers union. There is no other union or
series of unions in the United States that has nearly so much power. And you need to understand that the
real victims of this power play are not the members of the school board who resigned. They are the
children trapped in that educational swamp. By the way, when we're talking about all of this,
let me just go back to California for a moment because I'd simply have to. Just in recent weeks,
the governor of California, Gavin Newsom, has signed into law a measure that will create marijuana dispensaries in California, which will be allowed to sell food, and they will also be able to serve non-alcoholic beverages. And as the New York Times reports, they will also be able to, quote, host live events on their premises under the legislation. Okay, so here is the headline in the New York Times about this development in California, quote, California will allow Amsterdam-like cannabis cafes.
Now, this Amsterdam is Amsterdam in the Netherlands, one of those famously permissive liberal
woke cities in the world. A city which basically has such a permissive understanding and
morality that for decades, actually even longer than that, it was pretty much known for
legalized prostitution, but it is now known for having these cannabis cafes where just
about anything goes when it comes to the cannabis culture. And now California is going
to do the same. Okay, you've got to love the concern here. Okay, so a big concern was raised.
Now, what would be the concern? Oh, what could go wrong here? Well, just listen to this Senate's
quote. Last year, Governor Newsom vetoed a previous version of the bill,
concerned that it would undermine the state's smoke-free workplace protections, end quote.
Oh, so that's the big issue. The big issue here isn't the use of mind-altering drugs.
It's not the development of a drug culture. It's not the permissive sense in which the
culture will be represented by cannabis cafes. It was the fact that they would be in these cannabis
cafes. Oh, I don't know. They would be smoking cannabis of all things. And it's that part that
turns out to be the offense in the eyes of the governor. But you know, I think right now there's
some people who are saying, you know, you're just being too rough on California. And that might be true
because it's not just about California. How do you like this? Voters in Massachusetts go all the way
across the country all the way to the northeast, voters in Massachusetts are going to be voting on
whether or not to legalize, wait for it, magic mushrooms. Now, I know this seems like a fairy tale.
It is actually true. We're talking about hallucinogenic mushrooms and whether or not they're going
to be made legal in terms of the use of these mushrooms in the state of Massachusetts. Remember,
that Massachusetts was basically a Puritan colony. Well, let's just say the Puritans didn't sit around
taking in magic mushrooms.
But here's where you need to notice.
There's some really interesting developments here.
It's almost like the 1960s are re-exploding among us,
and the hippies are breaking out with new legislation.
Listen to this.
Quote, advocates have long claimed it.
That means this question four in Massachusetts,
which would permit adults to grow, possess,
and use psychedelic mushrooms,
quote, it will create regulated therapeutic access
to natural psychedelic medicines, end quote.
So here's the deal. Here's the deal. These are good psychedelic substances because they're organic and they're natural. They are, after all, not something you buy from a pusher in a vial. No, this is actually grown out in the woods. A magic mushroom. Charles Fain Lehman writing in the Wall Street Journal tells us, quote,
Question 4 envisages a highly permissive regime. Bay Staters could home grow psychedelics in plots as large as 12 square feet possess relatively large amounts and give
the drugs to others. Cities and towns would be allowed to restrict the time, place, and manner of
sales, but not to ban them outright. End quote. The opinion commentary in the journal suggests that
Massachusetts voters should just vote no. But you know, that just makes too much sense. Because when
you're looking at a story like this, you realize that this kind of initiative, it doesn't get before
voters by accident. Evidently, there is a sizable constituencies for magic mushrooms, the growth, the
possession and the use thereof. Meanwhile, you had the situation, even with the legalization of marijuana
or cannabis in some jurisdictions or people are beginning to wonder, wait just a minute, did we do
this too fast? I mean, after all, it doesn't appear to be without the problems many warned there
would be. And then again, maybe those who are behind all this kind of thing would just look at the
problems with, say, legalize marijuana and say, we'll just get over it by, oh, I don't know,
going out in a field with a magic mushroom.
no magic and no mushrooms here, but thanks for listening to the briefing. I want to tell you,
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That's recapturingtheglori.com.
Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmoler.com.
You can follow me on Twitter or X by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Moller.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsk.org.
For information on Boyce College, just go to voicecollege.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
