John Leeper
2K posts


@peterpercivhal @micah_erfan That's because he borrowed his way out but now they owe that money! So not sure how he cut anything
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@micah_erfan People love to criticize and that's okay but turning around a $12 billion hole without gutting social services is no small feat.
Whether you like his politics or not, the numbers are there and they don’t lie. A big W for NYC.
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He did this without cutting any social services, btw.
Democrats Deliver@DemzDeliver
🚨 When Mayor Mamdani took office, NYC had a $12 billion deficit. It is now $0.
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@MarcoFoster_ No you just gave them a plane full of money! 1.7 billion if I'm not mistaken!
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@mhoaz1 @Kick_Champ cuh how do crackers get jobs after openly being racist 😂😂😂 dhis sht don’t make sense .
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Wishing all the moms out there a wonderful Mother’s Day!
To @MichelleObama, I’m grateful for all the ways you’ve shown up for our daughters and our family over the years. We love you.

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@theliamnissan We don't want to stop him! He should have already Hiroshima them.
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@RadioGenoa Go back to your homeland and you won't have to hear them!!
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@iAnonPatriot I wish you and your long fingernails and big eyebrows could get sent to whatever country you want to be in!
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@MrPitbull07 Well it looks like he kept it because and I may be wrong but that doesn't look like a smoothie king he's in.
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Watching video of teenagers and young adults casually waving firearms around in a residential Chicago backyard, filming it like it’s entertainment, should alarm anyone who cares about the future of these neighborhoods.
Public safety is not a side issue. It is the foundation. Without it, nothing else works.
What meaningful community development can take root where lawlessness is normalized?
Who is going to invest capital, open a business, hire locally, or renovate property in an area where gunfire is routine?
What family is going to stake their savings and their children’s future on a block where disorder goes unchecked and schools are unsafe and failing?
Economic growth requires predictability. Families require stability. Schools require safe streets. None of that happens where accountability collapses.
For years, Chicago’s dominant political leadership, overwhelmingly Democratic at the city, county, and state levels, has embraced policies that critics argue deprioritized enforcement, reduced prosecution of certain offenses, and signaled leniency in the name of reform. The intention may have been to address inequities in the justice system. But intentions don’t override outcomes.
When enforcement weakens and consequences become inconsistent, a vacuum forms. And in that vacuum, the loudest and most reckless actors set the tone.
You cannot build thriving neighborhoods on rhetoric alone. You cannot substitute slogans for safety. And you cannot expect businesses, homeowners, or working families to gamble on communities where the rule of law feels optional.
Public safety is not partisan. It is prerequisite.
If leadership wants investment, revitalization, and opportunity in struggling neighborhoods, the first step is restoring a baseline expectation: illegal behavior will meet swift, consistent consequences.
Everything else, development grants, housing programs, ribbon cuttings, rests on that foundation.
Without it, you’re building on sand.
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