Katie Abraham should still be alive.
Instead, my youngest daughter was killed because government systems failed to stop dangers they were supposed to prevent.
Her death was not just one man’s actions. It was the result of reckless policies, weakened enforcement, diffused accountability, and political leaders who placed ideology above public safety.
And Katie is far from alone.
Across America, innocent people are killed, victimized, and left carrying lifelong trauma because systems repeatedly fail to intervene before preventable tragedy occurs.
What has been most staggering since Katie’s death is the reaction afterward.
Instead of confronting failed policies, too many politicians spend their time defending broken systems. Public safety concerns are dismissed as political attacks. Critics are ignored. The priority becomes protecting narratives and preserving power.
Even worse, many of these same leaders spend enormous energy attacking law enforcement while excusing or rationalizing people who repeatedly break the rules that hold civilized societies together. Increasingly, political sympathy seems reserved for offenders, activists, and ideological causes rather than ordinary citizens expected to absorb the consequences quietly.
Meanwhile, families like mine are left staring at graves.
Katie’s death reveals something larger than one policy or one administration. It reveals how modern government systems themselves increasingly produce these outcomes.
One of the great political illusions of modern history is the belief that centralized systems fail because the wrong people take power.
History teaches the opposite.
The systems themselves reward the wrong people.
Over time, these systems reward people who hold power, not people who tell the truth. They reward self-preservation, narrative management, and institutional loyalty over honesty and accountability.
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This pattern appears throughout history.
Communism and socialism did not repeatedly fail because compassionate idealists briefly lost control. Systems built around centralized power inevitably attract ambitious people detached from the citizens forced to live with the consequences of their decisions.
Yet after decades of repression, corruption, economic failure, and human suffering produced by these systems, many modern political movements still argue that the solution is more centralized power.
More bureaucracy.
More dependency.
More government control over daily life.
All while existing government systems already struggle to perform their most basic responsibilities competently.
History is clear. Societies grounded in liberty, decentralized authority, free enterprise, private property rights, and personal accountability have consistently produced more prosperity, stability, innovation, and opportunity than heavily centralized systems ever have.
At some point, government expansion stops being governance and becomes institutional self-preservation.
And when the government tries to do everything, it eventually becomes incapable of doing anything well.
Unlike the private sector, government rarely faces real corrective pressure when it fails. When private organizations fail repeatedly, customers leave, leadership changes, investors walk away, and organizations collapse if they refuse to adapt.
Government often works in reverse.
When government fails, politicians rarely change course. They demand more money, more power, and less accountability. Failure becomes justification for expanding the very systems that created it.
Illinois’ sanctuary-state framework is a perfect example.
Governor JB Pritzker and his political allies, including Dick Durbin, Tammy Duckworth, Toni Preckwinkle, Alexi Giannoulias, Kwame Raoul, and the Illinois supermajority, spent years weakening cooperation with federal immigration enforcement while dismissing public safety concerns as political attacks.
To be clear, the argument is not that illegal immigrants commit more or less crime than anyone else.
That misses the point.
The real question is simple:
Do government policies increase or decrease preventable harm to innocent people?
In Katie Abraham’s case, it is impossible to honestly argue that these policies reduced risk. They weakened enforcement, diluted accountability, reduced intervention opportunities, and allowed preventable danger to persist longer than it otherwise would have.
The TRUST Act.
The Way Forward Act.
Expanded driver’s licenses.
Reduced cooperation with ICE.
Expanded benefits regardless of immigration status.
Each policy was defended.
Each warning was dismissed.
Each criticism was politicized.
Until innocent people ended up dead.
And even afterward, the instinct was self-protection.
Protection of narratives.
Protection of policies.
Protection of political reputations.
Entrenched systems protect themselves first.
Always.
Because once institutions become large enough, preserving institutional legitimacy becomes more important than confronting failure honestly.
That is how societies decline. Not usually through one dramatic collapse, but through layers of tolerated incompetence, diffused accountability, ideological rigidity, and leadership classes disconnected from the citizens forced to live with the consequences.
Katie should still be alive.
And no carefully managed political language changes the fact that multiple layers of government failed the most basic responsibility any government has: protecting innocent citizens from preventable harm.
The collapse was foreseeable.
And the people responsible are still pretending it was unavoidable.
Editor’s Note: We voted for mass deportations, not mass amnesty. Help us continue to fight back against those trying to go against the will of the American people.
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