September 30, 2009
Where should “sex-offenders” live? How about six feet under dirt? Sounds good to me.
I came across this story, yesterday, while at the gym. One of CNN’s spin-off channels was talking about it. They were asking the question, “Where should sex-offenders live?”
On Monday morning, the Associated Press published a report about nine sex offenders living on state-owned land in Marietta.
By the afternoon, news organizations from CNN to the local paper came through the camp, looking to pick up the story. And all that scrutiny was making campers nervous.
“I’m very worried I’ll end up in jail because of all this attention,” Marque Miechurski, told GPB. The 30 year old continued, “CNN has been here, WSB [TV] has been here. People aren’t going to be happy.”
Now, the small group of homeless sex offenders has been ordered to move from the makeshift camp in a densely wooded area behind a suburban office park.
This could only happen in a society that cares more about showing mercy to the criminal rather than the victim. You want to know where I think child molesters and rapists should live? Six feet under. That’s where. What? Is that politically incorrect? I think people who murder people and people who ruin another person’s life by stealing their innocence as a child should be put to death. Period.
This story is clearly trying to get us to sympathize with these perverts. They are demonizing the strict laws in the state of Georgia that are in place to keep these sickos away from children. Like I said, if they were dead we wouldn’t have to worry about this. I know that supporting sex offenders is all the rage in Hollywood right now, but this makes me sick.
Comments (1)1 Comment »
RSS feed for comments on this post.

How do you know what all of these people are convicted of? In particular, how do you know they are all child molesters? The article certainly didn’t say “child molester” anywhere, it only said “sex offender”.
Prostitution is a sex offense.
Illegal distribution of pornography is a sex offense.
Sexual harassment is a sex offense.
Public urination is a sex offense.
Sodomy is, in some jurisdictions, a sex offense.
And, yes, statutory rape is a sex offense—regardless of whether it is committed by a 30-year-old-man or a 17-year-old boy.
It is quite bold of you to demand death for all these people, but that doesn’t make it right.
Incidentally, the age of consent in the USA ranges from 16-18 depending on state. On average, Americans become sexually active at 16, which means about half are younger. How old were you?
Comment by im — November 17, 2009 @ 5:33 pm