Watters: A ‘Feminized Justice System’ Is Giving ‘Too Many Second Chances’ to People Who ‘Are Born Bad’

‘How about we save society from the criminals instead?’

EXCERPT:

WATTERS: “You have this one guy, 16 years old, Travis Lewis. He murdered a 75-year-old woman. The woman’s daughter befriended the killer when he was in prison, actually petitioned for an early release. Guy gets out, she hires him to do work on her house, he kills her. He kills the mother, and he kills the daughter. And so you’ve got to take vengeance. You can’t just take pity. There is an episode of 'Cheers,' and — "
(Laughter)
KENNEDY: "Really running the gamut here, Jesse."
WATTERS: " — there is an ex-con that is in the bar, and Diane sees him and hears him, and he’s talking about an armed robbery that he’s going to do. And she goes to Sam, 'Please don’t call the cops. Don’t do it. This guy is just going to be another victim of the criminal justice system. I can save him.' And she tries to talk to him. It doesn’t work and he sticks up the bar. Women have a savior complex. And I’m not saying the criminal justice system has been feminized, but I kind of am. There is a deep-seated guilt. A lot of whites have it, but women especially, where they think they can just change the world and not change these people. Some of these people you can’t change. They are born bad. And we have to stop trying to save them. How about we save society from the criminals instead?"

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